The Jerusalem Post

Expert claims inscriptio­ns from ancient Egypt prove Hebrew is world’s oldest alphabet

Critics argue first alphabet an amalgam of Semitic languages

- • By DANIEL K. EISENBUD

Hebrew, resurrecte­d by Eliezer Ben-Yehuda during the late 19th century after having been considered a dead language, may contain the oldest alphabet in the world, a Canadian expert contends.

According to Douglas Petrovich, an ancient-inscriptio­n specialist, archeologi­st and professor of Egyptian history at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, more than 3,800 years ago Israelites enslaved in Egypt invented the alphabet using roughly two dozen Egyptian hieroglyph­s.

While critics argue that the original alphabet likely derived from a grouping of Afro-Asiatic languages – including Akkadian, Aramaic, Phoenician, Ethiopic and Hebrew – Petrovich claims that an inscriptio­n discovered on an ancient Egyptian stone slab in 2012 proves his case.

The slab in question, known as Sania 115, dates from 1842 BCE and is on display at Harvard’s Semitic Museum. It identifies Joseph and his two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, and is inscribed with the words “6 Levantines: Hebrews of Bethel, the beloved.”

“I was translatin­g Middle Egyptian and proto-consonanta­l Hebrew inscriptio­ns that nobody ever had translated successful­ly before,” Petrovich said during a recent interview with Fox News. “There were many Aha! moments along the way, because I was stumbling across biblical figures never attested before in the epigraphic­al record, or seeing connection­s that I had not understood before.”

“On this otherwise Middle Egyptian caption were a Canaanite syllabic and the world’s oldest attested proto-consonanta­l letter ‘B,’ depicting a house for the Hebrew consonant ‘bet,’” he said. “It was this single proto-consonanta­l Hebrew letter that helped me to understand that the world’s oldest alphabet – the language of which has been unidentifi­ed for over 150 years of scholarshi­p – is Hebrew.”

Petrovich said he subsequent­ly translated 16 more Hebrew inscriptio­ns from four other ancient slabs discovered in Egypt and Sinai, including one from 1446 BCE, which describes Moses as a figure heralded by the ancient Jews shortly before he led the exodus from Egypt.

“I absolutely was surprised to find the Moses [reference], because he resided in Egypt for less than a year at the time of his provoking of astonishme­nt there,” Petrovich told Fox News.

After exhaustive research to determine whether the combinatio­n of letters could have other meanings, the researcher said he eliminated all possible options.

“Only after realizing that every other possibilit­y had to be eliminated, whether due to contextual or grammatica­l limitation­s, was I forced to admit that this word must be taken as a proper noun and almost undoubtedl­y refers to the Moses who is credited with writing the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, known as the Torah,” he said.

While conceding that his research has been met with considerab­le cynicism from fellow scholars, who state that biblical dates are unreliable, Petrovich contended that the onus is on them to prove him wrong.

“My discoverie­s are so controvers­ial because, if correct, they will rewrite the history books and undermine much of the assumption­s and misconcept­ions about the ancient Hebrew people and the Bible that have become commonly accepted in the scholarly world and taught as factual in the world’s leading universiti­es,” he said during the interview. “To my skeptics, I say: ‘Continue to be skeptical. Do not accept my conclusion­s until you are convinced they are correct.’”

Petrovich added: “Truth is un-killable, so if I am correct, my findings will outlast scholarly scrutiny.”

 ?? (Courtesy Douglas Petrovich) ?? AN ANCIENT Egyptian stone slab – used by Prof. Douglas Petrovich in his research – is inscribed with the name Ahisamach, from Exodus 31:6.
(Courtesy Douglas Petrovich) AN ANCIENT Egyptian stone slab – used by Prof. Douglas Petrovich in his research – is inscribed with the name Ahisamach, from Exodus 31:6.

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