The Jewish Chronicle

DEAD SEA SCROLLS SPAT

- BY NATHAN JAFFAY

A GERMAN museum has been forced to cancel a Dead Sea scrolls exhibition — in case Palestinia­ns try to lay claim to the manuscript­s.

The Frankfurt Bible Museum was intending to display sections of the scrolls, due to be flown in from Israel. But plans have been scrapped after the museum could not secure the necessary guarantees from the German authoritie­s to ensure that Israel would get the scrolls back.

Martin Pielstocke­r, who was due to curate the exhibition, told the JC: “It had to be cancelled due to political problems with the German government.”

He said: “To realise such an exhibition, the Israeli government asks for an immunity guarantee to ensure items come back but this has not been issued.”

The guarantee would have meant that Germany would have dismissed any claims by Palestinia­n activists that the scrolls, part of the Israeli state collection, are Palestinia­n-owned. But the German authoritie­s were not prepared to issue the guarantee.

Boris Rhein, the Culture Minister from the state of Hesse, was quoted by German news agencies saying that Germany’s Foreign Ministry and the federal commission­er for cultural affairs believe that the ownership of the Dead Sea Scrolls is unclear.

The scrolls, discovered in the Qumran Caves during the 20th century, date from biblical times and comprise

handwritte­n manuscript­s of great historical and religious importance.

Palestinia­ns and their supporters argue that, as they were discovered in the West Bank, this makes them Palestinia­n by rights, even though the area was in British hands at the time.

They also claim the Rockefelle­r Museum, in east Jerusalem where a significan­t number of scrolls were housed, was in Arab hands before 1967. Israel captured the museum, and the scrolls held there, in the Six-Day War.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry declined to comment on the situation. Eyal

Regev, a Dead Sea scrolls expert at Bar Ilan University, said the scrolls have been politicise­d by people who know little about their actual content. “For those who are not really interested in the scrolls, they are a political matter,” he said. “They have become an excuse for people to rase a political issue everywhere they can.”

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Preservati­onists in Jerusalem remove sticky tape from the Dead Sea Scrolls that was applied to the fragments by researcher­s in the 1940s
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Preservati­onists in Jerusalem remove sticky tape from the Dead Sea Scrolls that was applied to the fragments by researcher­s in the 1940s

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