History of Israel f’^61 Section 1: People of the Book A little land thrown up by a geographical accident during the
early Diluvial period, blocking the expansion of the Mediterranean
sea eastwards, later called Palestine did not have much to
recommend it to a present day tourist. A wandering ground for
the nomads, a poor cousin to the greener Egypt and Babylon
it had little grace or scenic beauty, consisting as it did of barren
hills punctuated by a few fertile oases, located next to the Dead
Sea depression and separated by an inhospitable desert eastward.
Who could imagine that one day this little cjrab land will become
one of the most important spiritual centres of the world. The
little green patches coveted by the nomads attracted hordes of
vandals and despoilers who rerjejjed by the desert wastes flocked
to this land in search of food and shelter. Invaders came and
went but some made it their home. Placed at the crossroads of
ancient world, little Palestine not only became a refuge for the
homeless but also a haven for the more enterprising, and always
remained at the hub. centre of the civilised world west of India. The Amonites, the first recorded settlers in the third
millennium B.C. who conquered the land upto the district of
Lebanon, were hedged between two great powers-the -• R 2 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 19 , yionians on the north and Egyptians on the south-whose
• ffijence’and sovereignty alternated over the’Tand. OF the two,
he Babylonian influence in the early period was deeper.
I uealzaggisi, the first Babylonian Emperor, spread his empire
westward upto the sea, followed by Sargon of Agad around
2600 B.C., which name figures in fables along with Moses a
century later. Sargon completed the conquest, and finally
Hammurabi by the end of third millennium B.C. formalized the
assimilation of Palestine into the Babylonian Empire. Lightly
controlled, fairly taxed and wisely and benevolently ruled and
administered, Palestine was culturally transformed with its
country’s customs, laws and even myths, acquiring a Babylonian
hue. Abraham and Hebrew Genesis Instead of treating the slow and tortuous route of chronology of
events, fairly well documented by more competent authorities,
an attempt is made here to emphasise events and personalities
as they shaped the Jewish nation. Simply stated the Jews in
some form existed as early as 4500 B.C., the beginning of the
Pagan period, as a historiologist would like to describe. This was
the time of proto-history when pre-Mohenjodaro and Indus
Valley culture existed in India contemporaneous to Sura and
Kest in Babylon and the pre-dynastic period of Egypt. By 3600
B.C. Sumerian civilization was fairly weil-known and by 3500
B.C. the first dynasty in Egypt came into being. Before 2800
B.C. Akkad had established a great kingdom around Saragon.
Later, uniting the kingdom of Sanana and Akkadia he laid the
foundation of Babylonian supremacy. The Middle Kingdom in
ESVPt is dated around 2400 B.C. and the period 2000 B.C. to
k can rough’y De described as the era of wandering for the Chosen people. Around 2000 B.C. Abraham, the father_of
rjfjevvs, and Sarah, hiswife, left Ur in Chaldea within Babylonia?
. LfinTe _qfNoaTTand the great TToocT according to many historians
^much earlier than Abraham and is placed around the time of
anu, the first man who appeared on the soil of Bharat through
Wate^ ice and flood. 20 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 2 As per Genesis Chapter 7 to 9, Noah was six hundred years
old when the great flood came which lasted a hundred and fifty
days. After that he lived another three hundred fifty years. This
gives him a total life span of nine hundred fifty years. Noah’s
sons and the new generation of Nimrod and Babel feature
thereafter till in Chapter 11, the whole world became of one
tongue. The last progeny of Noah’s lineage Terah begot Abraham,
Nahor and Haron. Haron begot Lot and the story of Abraham
and his wife Sarah starts then in Ur in the land of Chaldea. It
would be imprudent to put too fine a point on the time span
of Babylonian account since that would upset the applecart of
historical time frame. So we come straight to the time of Abraham
and take as read the story of Abraham’s journey from Ur to the
land of Canaan and from there to Haran, where he lived for
some time till Cod ordered him out to a new land, blessed him
and promised to make R’is seed a great nation. Thereupon,
Abraham left Haran with his coveted Sarah who was fair, and
a plague descended upon the land forcing Abraham to leave
Egypt till he reached Bethal and Hai and built an altar to his
Loid. Later Lot under entreaties from his uncle Abraham left the
overcrowded habitat of Cannanite and the Perizzite and
journeyed east to Jordan. And then in Chapter 13, Para 14 ibid
’And the Lord said unto Abram, after that Lot was separated
from him, Lift up now thine eyes, and look from the place
where thou art northward, and southward, and eastward, and
westward: ”15 For all the land which thou seest, to thee will I give it,
and to thy seed forever. ”16 And I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth: so
that if a man can number the dust of the earth then
shall thy seed also be numbered. ”17 Arise, walk through the land in the length of it and in
the breadth of it; for I will give it into thee. ”18 Then Abram removed his tent and came and dwelt in
the plain of Mamre, which is in Hebron, and built there
an altar unto the Lord.” CHAPTER 2 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 21 \A/ hear of the word Hebrew associated with Abraham for the
r t time in Chapter 14 Para 13 ibid ”And there came one that
h d escaped, and told Abram the Hebrew; for he dwelt in the
nlain of Mamre the Amorite, brother of Eshcol, and brother of
Aner: and these were confederate with Abraham.” Later Abraham on insistence from Sarah fathered a child
named Ishmael from his Egyptian maid servant Hagar, and then
the Lord entered into Covenant with Abraham and blessed him.
He promised that he shall be the father of many nations and
his seedTshaii multiply on the earth. Then Sarah in old age bore
Abraham a son named, Isaac, while the Lord as part of His
covenant bode Abraham to get every eight days old child and
himself circumcised. The story thereafter of Abraham’s willingness
to sacrifice Isaac and the intervention of the Angel is well known
and told elsewhere. Now we come to the story of Essau and
i J Jacob, twin sons of Isaac. The treachery of Jacob to steal the
^S/r blessings of his father at the behest of his mother, Sarah, offering
of fresh blessing on Essau by Isaac and ordering away of Jacob
to a distant place whose subsequent flight and wanderings took
him to East and finally his entry into Egypt are chronicled
elsewhere. We leave the proto-history of the dynasty of Abraham
into two main branches, one of Jews and the other born out of
Ishmael who bore a new race which embraced the religion of
Islam, and return to the other momentous events in the life of
tfuTlsraelites! During the Egyptian exile around 2000 B.C. Palestine
prospered well, its figs and grapes were plentiful. Water and
honey abounded and wheat and barley crops nourished its
people and it’s cattle wealth. Baked bricks were used in frail
houses and huts, the art of amulets and wine presses and
potteries prospered and long tunneTs at Gezar led to a flowing
spnng, mythologically linked to the great Flood. Politically, the
land was undeveloped with constant clan feuds making it easy
tor the invaders to subdue the warring tribes. By the beginning
°f 2nd millennium, B.C., the Canaanites and Semetic tribes
Probably came to inhabit the land and gradually overpowered
e earlier Amonites. Simultaneously, the Babylonian influence 22 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 2 gave way to Egyptian paramountcy, helped by an invasion of
the Kassites from the East which distracted the Babylonian state
and its own dynasty lasted for 600 years. Egyptian King Thutomose in (1501 to 1447 B.C.) ransacked
Palestine and enriched his coffers with the tributes and spoils of
the land, letting his soldiers live off the countryside and carried
the children to Egypt for education in order to completely
Egyptianise the country. The Canaanites lived by agriculture,
their produce being plundered by the king’s soldiers, they toiled
hard to cultivate the land and maintain a rather workable
economy. Arts and crafts flourished but the land was still riven
by petty jealousies and torn by rivalries of petty princes. The Tel
El Amara letters of 1887 throw considerable light on the period
of Canaanite survival under the Pharoah’s rule, which reduced
them to a state of utter servility and humiliation, constantly
prostrating before the king, seeking help against the invaders
from the north and east. Troubled as the land of Canaanites was
and the Egyptian king Amenhotep IV, preoccupied with his own
kingdom, the Hittites, a virile northern tribe, took control of
Canaanites as far as south Palestine and even challenged by now
the nominal Egyptian king. Ramses managed to contain any
further Hittite’ advance southwards and in 1271 B.C. signed a
treaty of peace. These were troubled times. Pressed by rapacious
hordes from the desert in the east, and the sea in the west, the
Canaanites fought almost half a dozen enemies liyjngJrojTijcrJsjs
to crisis. A fog now descends on the story of the land and little is
known till it lifts five_centuries later. By then, Egyptian .power
declines, Hktites lose control, Babylon and Assyria busy
themselves fighting each other and little Palestine left uncared
got a reprieve. The vacuum is soon filled by the Philistines moving
in from the sea and the Armeans from north penetrating upto
Syria. And in this confused kaleidoscope of racial movements
the Hebrews eager for a piece of land in the fertile crescent
make their appearance. As the fog clears after these five centuries,
records begin with the Biblical narration where the Hebrews and
their ancestors have long ago been settled in the land of Palestine, CHAPTER 2 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 23 named after the latest entrants, the Philistines. They occupy
important places, ruled by monarchy and worship a strange
new Cod, Yahweh. The early period of Hebrew arrival is shrouded
in mystery, folk- lores and fables resulting in an accomplished
miracle of scattered tribes arriving from different directions into
this land, metamorphosed into a unique national religion. Moses and Exile in Egypt Less of myth and more of a fact as generations to come later
believed the Egyptian bondage left a permanent scar on the
Jewish psyche and burned into their consciousness a hatred for
oppression and tyranny. This found place in many of their laws,
some of them preambling ”Remember your_ bondage in Egypt.”
EvejTjif peopje forgot, their Prophets constantly reminded them
that they had been oppressed and a Semitic fervour ordained
them to show consideration and compassion to the orphan,
widow, slave or an alien. These exhortations transformed the
soul of the Jewish nation to practise and preach the gospel of
freedom, its meaning and responsibilities. The saga of exodus revolves round one man, unique in
Jewish history. Moses, who according to Napoleon, was even_a
8r?M§L Biblical ”figure IRarTJesus, and to Heme, even .greater
trTan Mount Sinai. Mo^e£Treated_lhe Jewish Nation. Leader,
Prea^hejl and prophet rolled into one hg_reorganised Hebrew
reTigion_and thought. A moral titan with immense influence
over his folk, he created the Hebrew people by binding them
through the laws of religion. Though of uncertain scientific
historicity based on evidence till date, Moses according to Bible
was born during the height of Pharaos’ oppression. Escaping the
child slaughter ordered by the Pharaos, cleverly hidden by his
mother in the Nile and discovered by the King’s own daughter,
Moses wasjarqught up in royal luxury. BuU]is_heart,wept for the
”H£5l6rhis people. Having slained the tormentor of a Jew, he
’led to escape the wrath of the Pharaos, seeking shelter with the
wandering Medianites in the desert and married the daughter of
eir Priest Chief. In the solitude of the desert, Moses_cameJace
•£°-Iacewith Yahweh, His first revelation to a man. Fortified and 24 INDIA AND ISRAEL CHAPTER 2 inspired he returned to Egypt to save his people. The story of
the exodus is well documented in the Biblical account and by
later day historians. He consecrated the freedom of his people
at Sinai through a covenant with Yahweh and gave to successive
generations the laws and religion based on the immortal
Decalogue, better known to the world as The Ten
Commandments. A masterful leader and law giver, through his
wanderings in the desert, he schooled his flock in hardships,
trials and tribulations. Striving for the Promised Land, fighting
desert tribes like the Amalekites, overcoming strifes and dissensions
within he steeled his people into a formidable, virile and bedouin
nation capable of winning a home for themselves. Thus, leading
and preaching, he brought them to Canaan, the land he only
saw from a distance, never reaching there, as God gave him to
death_ and ”no man knoweth of his sepulchre”. Moses, myth or
fact, left a legacy that profoundly influenced the Hebrews on
the threshold of history. Emulated by their Prophets, ”a pillar of
light” as described by philosopher Ahad Ha’m, the greatest
”Hebrew who lived as the quintessence oTtfie best in the Hebrew
genius, Moses through his influence catalysed into unity one
Semitic tribe after another, bound by laws, and moulded them
into a Nation. In Mosaic faith, Yahweh is an inseparable part of the lives (5f
man and the spirit of universal order. He is the source and
sanction for all secular laws made, not for convenience of man,
but to accomplish a higher divine purpose. To_break laws was
not merely the sin against society but against YahweTTHfffiself
a’ncTHis wishes. This resulted in a unique bond between Hebrews
and their Cod Yahweh, who sought to help, teach and protect
his chosen seed. He helped his children in destroying their
enemies but punished them all the same for their trespasses and
breach of the moral code. Unlike other religions his code was
rigid and there were no laxity or extenuating circumstances to
allow deviations. Hejielped his Chosen people when they were
right but_srnote them_with vengeance when they erred. This
magnetic austerity and unfailing adherence to the principle of
law depicted in a Michaelangelo masterpiece puts Moses in a
unique position amongst world’s religious leaders. CHAPTER 2 HISTORY OF ISRAEL 25 Steeped in the spirit of the desert Moses wove his people,
Yahweh and the moral law in a sublime trinity. Yahweh^ loving,
cold, hard, extremely jealousj)f_hjs rigb.ts,~~filled his people with
avv
code. The law of Moses in various modes, spread through the
pases of Pentateuch and the simple Decalogue of Exodus XXXIV,
14-26, being the oldest suited to the needs of a nomad people.
The code djemanded only the worship of Yahweh and forbade
eraverTimages and jdpjs. Sacrifices and some rituals, however,
wefe~added and Sabbath made a day of rest. Deuteronomic
code owed its essence to the genius of Moses and his remarkable
document called for the suppression of baser passions, forbade
stealing, adultery, murder, being false witness and coveting. It
thus went far beyond the narrow compass of ancient morality.
Though many heathen customs and distortions crept in Hebrew
worship with time and the Israelites fell into wicked ways due to
alien influence, these were checked by the Prophets, and the
religion of Moses remained unsullied, purified by the fire that
scorched his soul when he was in communion with his God. \ ? £ /£