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The Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem: Exploring Ancient Cultures, Sharing a Peaceful Future - P1/2
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Welcome, noble viewers,
to A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms.
Together, let us go to the
ancient Holy Land’s city
of Jerusalem for a visit
to a museum that is
truly unique in the world:
The Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem.
With artifacts from the land
of the Hittites, Assyria,
Persia, Canaan, Egypt,
and Sumer, in the time
of the Old Testament
and beyond, this is where
the legendary ancient lands
of the Bible come to life.
People from all faiths,
ages, and backgrounds
can explore the wonders
of the cultures of
the Ancient Near East –
and their fascinating
interrelationships.
From the dawn
of the first civilizations
all the way
to the early Christian era,
walking through these
treasure-laden galleries
is journeying through
the pages of the Bible,
as well as
deep into our shared
human spiritual heritage.
For this,
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem, which
first opened its doors
to the public in 1992,
has been acclaimed
internationally
as a center for learning
and understanding
toward peace.
Ms. Amanda Weiss is
the dedicated director of
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem.
The Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem
is a unique museum.
It’s the only museum
in the world
that looks at the Bible
as our history book,
and it shows
through our galleries
here in the museum the
chronological development
of civilization through
the Ancient Near East.
So we look at
how humanity,
how people developed,
how cultures, language,
trade and commerce,
and religion began
and developed
from its earliest origins
up into early Christianity.
This museum
was founded by Dr. Elie
and Batya Borowski.
Dr. Elie Borowski was
one of the world’s
finest collectors of ancient
Near Eastern artifacts.
He was also a scholar,
an historian
in his own right.
He had a very deeply
religious upbringing and
went on to study
theology and history
throughout Europe.
And he brought to Israel
this remarkable, priceless
collection of antiquities
to put on display
in a museum.
And he created
the Bible Lands Museum
in doing so.
The museum’s founder,
renowned Polish expert
Dr. Elie Borowski,
had a dream of fostering
understanding among
all faiths and cultures,
through an understanding
of biblical history.
His resources were
his extensive knowledge
of ancient art, history,
and languages on one hand,
and on the other,
personal experiences
witnessing
the atrocities of war.
Elie Borowski
really understood
the history of the Bible,
the purpose
of understanding
the spiritual element in
the message of the Bible.
And his belief was that
if we could show
the physical evidence
of the cultures
that are written about
in the Bible itself,
that we could encourage
people to learn more about
the humanitarian side
and the development
of Western civilization,
what it has
on the positive side of life,
and how you can study
and learn more from it
to build a better future.
His motto was that
“the future of mankind
has its roots in the past,
and only through
understanding our history
can we build
a better future.”
Creating the collection,
in and of itself,
and looking for a place
where it would be
most perfectly appreciated,
really was a result of him
meeting Mrs. Borowski,
Batya Borowski,
and they married
in the early 1980s.
And she felt very strongly
that this museum needed
to be in Jerusalem,
because it is the center
for monotheistic faith
and the one city
in the world
where Christians,
Muslims and Jews
hold it very high
in their esteem
and very important
in their religious belief
and their faith.
And no place
compares to Jerusalem.
So together,
they put this museum
on the map.
They built it together.
The Bible Lands Museum,
according to
Dr. Elie Borowski’s vision,
also encourages
appreciation of
the timeless morals
and ethics of the Bible.
Mr. Borowski contributed
over 50 years’ worth
of his own
Ancient Near East
art collection
to the museum.
The logo itself
is parentheses,
to frame the Bible.
And at the top is a star,
which gives us the heavens.
And if you look at
the line in between,
looks like water, and
you have a straight line
in between the two
and that’s the firmament,
the land.
So you have
the star in the sky,
the water below and
the land in the middle.
And all of it is framed
within the framework
of what is the Bible.
That’s the logo of
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem.
It went through
many different changes.
We chose artifacts
at the beginning
to show different cultures
and we realized
that’s not good enough,
because it’s too finite.
If it’s something
that’s Persian or
Egyptian or Canaanite,
it doesn’t give you all of
the lands of the Bible.
And this way,
we have a logo that’s
a very modern concept,
but really frames
all of our ancient history
and the Bible itself.
Ms. Weiss gives us
an overview of just
some of the reasons why
the Bible Lands Museum
is so special.
This really is
a unique museum.
You enter this museum
and you walk through
history chronologically.
You have an opportunity
for people of all faiths,
all backgrounds,
all nationalities
to visit here
and learn something
that I believe connects to
who we are
as human beings,
and who we are
each individually in
our own spiritual quest,
our personal
spiritual quest.
And so that makes us
a universal museum.
We are called
the Bible Lands Museum,
because that was
the vision of our founder,
of Elie Borowski,
but it’s really the
creation of civilization as
we understand it today.
And so therefore
it’s a flow and a look at
civilization through
the millennia really,
that you don’t see
any place else
exhibited in this way.
When you read
the stories of the Bible
and you’re looking at
the development
of civilization
in this part of the world,
in all of
the Ancient Near East,
whether it’s the flood story
and you see it in the Bible
as the story of Noah,
or you see it in ancient
Mesopotamian tablets
as the Gilgamesh Epic,
you’re seeing stories
that reflect one another
in their history.
You understand the
development of writing –
where did the alphabet
come from?
Why don’t we write a
Chinese pictorial alphabet
or an Egyptian
hieroglyphic language form,
a pictographic language?
How did we get
to the alphabet itself?
Where did it come from?
All of these things are
very much interconnected
with the bible.
Because when you start
to look at different kings
and how did they
seal documents and
what kind of languages
did they use,
it starts to make sense,
and you go from having
the spiritual concept
on one end,
which is very much
interpretive, alright?
If you read the Bible
or I read the Bible,
we’re coming at it
from our own culture and
our own understanding
and our own belief system.
We have our own
religious leaders
that are showing us
to pay attention to
certain parts
of the message and
to read it and filter and
understand it this way.
We believe
that this entire museum
is here for anybody
that wants to
understand the Bible,
and if you look around
the galleries around you
here, we have quotes
from the Bible,
from the Old Testament,
from the Bible itself,
that reflect the history
of that time period
in the gallery itself.
We asked Ms. Weiss if
there is a particular artifact
from the museum that
she would like share about.
I do and I have many,
but I can only show you
I think probably one
in order to you to be able
to fit it into your program.
So I have one
that I’ve chosen.
Can we go take a look at it?
It’s right over here.
What we’re standing
in front of right now
is a Roman sarcophagus,
a coffin basically
from the time period
of Constantine.
But why is it so important?
Because
in early Christian art,
the ancient art was
what told us
about religious belief and
led us and helped guide
people to understanding
the religious principles.
So this particular piece
talks about the miracles
of Jesus Christ.
Now I said at the beginning,
it’s from the time period
of Constantine, so that’s
about the 4th century,
around 332.
And we know because
in Latin across the top
here, we know
who was buried here.
Her name was
Julia Latrolilia.
So Julia is no longer here,
her bones are not
in the building,
we have no human bones
in the museum.
But we do have
this beautiful, carved,
Roman, marble carved
Roman sarcophagus
that shows us
Jesus riding into Jerusalem
on a donkey,
a fragment of Zacchaeus
hiding in the tree.
And here you have
various scenes along
the way that bring us,
and in many ways
connect us between
the Old Testament
and the New Testament,
because here at the far end,
you have Abraham,
and Isaac
shown as a little child.
And if you look closely
here you have the hand
of the angle of God
holding back the hand
of Abraham.
So here you have
the story of the sacrifice
of Isaac, or in Hebrew
as we call it
the Akedat Yitzchak,
the binding of Isaac.
You have
the sacrificial lamb
and the burning bush.
Again, we’re talking about
the miracles of Christ,
so you have the miracle
of the multiplication
of the loaves
to feed the starving.
And all of this pulls together.
You have Adam and Eve
on the other side.
The most important part
of the entire sarcophagus,
though, is the cross
at the bottom
which is the Chi Rho,
which is the earliest
known symbol of Christ
and it therefore makes this,
historically,
a very important artifact.
It predates anything
actually with this symbol
on it that they even have
in the Vatican collections,
which are known
to be some of
the most extensive
collections existing.
This is only one piece in
the museum’s collection
of thousands.
We have pieces
that talk about
the ancient calendar
in the time of Abraham,
that are ancient tablets
that were reconstructed
and put back together
again in order to
help us understand.
We have cylinder seals
and important material
that really is
the physical evidence
of the people of the Bible.
When you read the Bible,
we’re not reading
only about the Holy Land
in Israel, we’re reading
about all of the lands
around us.
And this museum tries to
give you the entire picture
of the history
of those lands from the
beginning of civilization
even into
early Christianity.
We thank Ms. Weiss and
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem
for opening your doors
for us and all people
of the world to explore
this wonderful treasure
trove of religion, culture,
and human life.
To find out more about
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem,
please visit
Thank you,
precious viewers,
for joining us today on
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms.
Please join us
next Sunday,
for the second and
final part of our program,
as we enter some of the
fascinating galleries of
the Bible Lands Museum
Jerusalem.
Now, please stay with us
for Our Noble Lineage,
after Noteworthy News.
May exciting
spiritual discoveries
beckon you each day.
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