The Jerusalem Post

TAU launches MA for study of Ethiopian biblical texts

- • By HANNAH BROWN

Tel Aviv University has created a new master’s program in the study and research of biblical texts of Ethiopian Jewry that are in danger of being lost.

On Tuesday, the Department of Biblical Studies at Tel Aviv University’s Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies and Archaeolog­y announced the launch of this program.

The program is attracting Israeli students of Ethiopian descent who are interested in studying the sacred texts of their families’ culture. These texts are written in Ge’ez ( an ancient Ethiopian language) and called the Orit. The program is known as Orit Guardians. Administra­tors and professors hope to expand the program to include bachelor’s and PhD studies.

Biblical scholar Prof. Dalit Rom- Shiloni, who leads the initiative, said: “The Scriptures of Beta Israel [ the Ethiopian Jewish community] are accompanie­d by oral traditions of translatio­n and interpreta­tion, as well as prayers composed by the Kesim [ religious leaders] for their communitie­s through the ages.”

Rom- Shiloni added:“These cultural treasures are in danger of extinction, if an urgent effort is not made to document and preserve them – and this is our main goal. To our great delight, we found enormous enthusiasm among educated and socially aware Israelis of Ethiopian descent, who wish to safeguard their heritage for future generation­s.”

The new program’s lecturers and supervisor­s are faculty members at the Department of Biblical Studies as well as Dr. Anbessa Teferra, head of the Semitic Linguistic­s Program at the Department of Hebrew and Semitic Linguistic­s, and Dr. Ran HaCohen of the Department of Literature. The program is supported by an academic committee headed by Dr. Diana Lipton.

According to Rom- Shiloni, “The volumes of the Hebrew Bible, found in every Israeli household, are all almost absolutely identical, down to the letter. This text, known as the Masoretic Text, was consolidat­ed in Tiberias between the 6th and 10th centuries AD.”

“We know, however,” she continued, “that Biblical textual traditions existed hundreds of years before that time. Research on texts from the Second Temple period, especially the Dead Sea Scrolls, has revealed that in the last centuries BC, Jewish communitie­s held various versions of the sacred texts, which were essentiall­y similar, but definitely not identical.”

“The Jews who came to Israel from Ethiopia brought their own Scriptures, written in Ge’ez – an ancient Semitic language known only to their spiritual leaders, the Kesim,” Rom- Sheloni said. “Through the ages, a rich oral tradition emerged alongside the written text, including prayers in Ge’ez, as well as translatio­ns and interpreta­tions created by the Kesim for their communitie­s, in languages that they could understand – Amharic and Tigrinya.”

“But Beta Israel’s way of life changed completely when they came to Israel – detracting from the Kesim’s status, underminin­g their age- old training processes, and bringing these cultural treasures to the brink of extinction,” Rom- Sheloni said. “The Orit Guardians program is, in a sense, a rescue mission undertaken to academical­ly study this important heritage.”

The students who have just begun their studies in the 2020- 2021 academic year are all Ethiopian Israelis with bachelor’s degrees, who are eager to preserve and study their heritage.

“The important point is that they are the only ones who can do the job,” Rom- Sheloni said. “Unlike researcher­s who do not belong to Beta Israel, these students speak Amharic, and have access to the elderly Kesim. This is a novel, pioneering and uniquely inspiring project. The students bring immense motivation and commitment, understand­ing fully well that if they don’t do it, it simply won’t happen.” Then, she said, “this heritage, that is so precious to them, will be lost.”

“We believe that the students’ research projects will contribute to the enhancemen­t of the Jewish identity of Ethiopian Israelis and increase the public’s awareness of their culture, while establishi­ng the heritage of Ethiopian Jews as an academic field of study and research in every aspect – cultural, historical, linguistic, religious, spiritual and social – in both Israeli and internatio­nal academia,” she said.

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