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An undated file photo released by the Israel Antiquities
Authority shows a burial box found during excavations in Jerusalem.
CNS PHOTO/MARIANA SALZBERGER/ISRAEL ANTIQUITIES
AUTHORITY/REUTERS |
By Judith Sudilovsky
Catholic News Service
JERUSALEM
(CNS) -- Catholic biblical scholars and an Israeli archaeologist rejected
filmmakers’ claim that a tomb uncovered nearly 30 years ago in Jerusalem
is the burial site of Jesus and his family.
Dominican Father Jerome Murphy-O’Connor, a biblical archaeologist
and expert in the New Testament at the French Biblical and Archaeological
School of Jerusalem who was interviewed for the film two years ago, said
he did not believe there was any truth to the claim.
“It is a commercial ploy that all the media is playing into,”
he told Catholic News Service Feb. 27.
Amos Kloner, an Israeli archaeologist who wrote the original excavation
report on the site for the predecessor of the Israel Antiquities Authority,
called the claim “nonsense.”
“In their movie they are billing it as ‘never before reported
information,’ but it is not new. I published all the details in
the Antiqot journal in 1996, and I didn’t say it was the tomb of
Jesus’ family,” said Kloner, now a professor of archaeology
at Israel’s Bar-Ilan University.
“I think it is very unserious work. I do scholarly work ... based
on other studies,” he said.
Toronto filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici and Oscar-winning Canadian director
James Cameron announced at a press conference in New York City Feb. 26
that by using new technology and DNA studies they have determined that
among the 10 ossuaries -- burial boxes used in biblical times to house
the bones of the dead -- found in the cave by Kloner in 1980 are those
of Jesus, his brothers, Mary, another Mary whom they believe is Mary Magdalene,
and “Judah, son of Jesus.”
The documentary film by Jacobovici and Cameron was scheduled to air on
the Discovery Channel March 4 and in Canada March 6 on Vision TV. A book
on the topic, written by Jacobovici and Charles Pellegrino and published
by HarperCollins, went on sale Feb. 27.
Father Murphy-O’Connor said the names found on the ossuaries “are
a combination of very common names.”
“Fifty percent of all Jewish women in the first century were called
either Mary or Salome. It doesn’t mean much at all,” he said.
“You can prove anything with statistics.”
The DNA tests could “only prove that they are human” but “certainly
did not prove” any familial connection, he said.
Father Murphy-O’Connor noted that Kloner had written about the findings
a decade ago, and though it was all out in the public domain, nobody had
been interested.
According to press reports, the filmmakers said they had worked on the
project with world-renowned scientists, including DNA specialists, archaeologists
and statisticians. They said the ossuaries were not identified as belonging
to Jesus’ family when they were first discovered because the archaeologists
at the time did not have the knowledge and scientific tools that now exist.
But Kloner noted that Jesus’ family was from Galilee and had no
ties to Jerusalem, casting serious doubt that they would have had a burial
cave in Jerusalem. He added that the names on the ossuaries were common
during that time and their discovery in the same cave is purely coincidental.
He said the tomb belonged to a middle- or upper-middle-class Jewish family
during the first century and the cave was in use for 70-100 years by the
family.
Other books, films and articles about the tomb, including a full-page
feature in London’s The Sunday Times, a British Broadcasting Corp.
documentary film and a book called “The Jesus Dynasty” by
James D. Tabor, have been published and produced on the topic in the years
since the tomb’s discovery.
At the New York press conference, Jacobovici said he thought the so-called
“James ossuary,” purported by its owner, Oded Golan, to have
belonged to James, the brother of Jesus, was also from the tomb, and he
cited a forensic technique used to determine this.
He did not mention that in 2003 the Israel Antiquities Authority declared
the inscription on the James ossuary a forgery or that Golan is currently
on trial for forging part of the inscription.
Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, a biblical scholar and head of Toronto’s
Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation, said this latest film shows
that “self-proclaimed experts” have learned nothing from the
James ossuary incident.
“One would think that we learned some powerful lessons from the
media hype surrounding the James ossuary several years ago, and how important
public institutions like the ROM (Royal Ontario Museum of Toronto) were
duped in their hosting such fraudulent works,” he said.
Father Rosica said: “Why did the so-called archaeologists of this
latest scoop wait 27 years before doing anything about the discovery?
James Cameron is far better off making movies about the Titanic rather
than dabbling in areas of religious history of which he knows nothing.”
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