Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

A study of Christ’s Thorn Jujube

-

NEOT KEDUMIM: As the sun beats down on the barren slopes around Jerusalem, a tree of the kind believed to have provided the crown of thorns in Biblical accounts of Jesus Christ’s crucifixio­n stands unaffected, its fruits ample and foliage green.

While pilgrims converged on the city for Easter to commemorat­e the events of Christian tradition, Israeli scientists researchin­g climate change were at work in the surroundin­g hills studying the Ziziphus Spina- Christi, commonly known as Christ’s Thorn Jujube.

They believe it is a “pioneer species” in the fight against desertific­ation because its hardiness makes it resilient to rising temperatur­es and aridity. It can draw water from deep undergroun­d, and it retains the ability to photosynth­esise even when exposed to high temperatur­es and solar radiation.

“It’s one of the few species that we can plant on these slopes that have nothing on them,” said Shabaab Cohen of Israel’s Volcani Agricultur­al Research Centre.

“We only know maybe one or two other species that can do that.”

Various plants have been proposed as the source of the crown of thorns the New Testament says was placed on Christ’s head in the lead-up to the crucifixio­n, and no-one knows for certain. But the consensus among Christian scholars tends towards Ziziphus Spina-Christi.

The researcher­s hope the tree, which provides sustenance to bees and insects, can help support life in areas threatened by deadly heat.

“Studying its attributes and its traits is going to help us to breed species that we want in the future,” said Cohen. – Reuters/African News Agency (ANA)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa