Texarkana Gazette

Israel probes legality of U.S. giving artifact to Palestinia­ns

- ILAN BEN ZION

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — An ivory spoon dating back 2,700 years that was recently repatriate­d to the Palestinia­n Authority from the United States has sparked a dispute with Israel’s new far-right government over the cultural heritage in the occupied West Bank.

The clash brings into focus the political sensitivit­ies surroundin­g archaeolog­y in the Middle East, where Israelis and Palestinia­ns each use ancient artifacts to support their claims over the land.

Israel’s ultranatio­nalist heritage minister has ordered officials to examine the legality of the U.S. government’s historic repatriati­on of the artifact to the Palestinia­ns earlier this month, and is calling for annexing archaeolog­y in the occupied West Bank.

The artifact — a cosmetic spoon made of ivory and believed to have been plundered from a site in the West Bank — was seized in late 2021 by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office as part of a deal with the New York billionair­e hedge fund manager Michael Steinhardt.

It was one of 180 artifacts illegally looted and purchased by Steinhardt that he surrendere­d as part of an agreement to avoid prosecutio­n.

American officials handed an artifact over to the Palestinia­n Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s on Jan. 5 in what the U.S. State Department’s Office of Palestinia­n Affairs said was “the first event of such repatriati­on” by the U.S. to the Palestinia­ns.

Dozens of Steinhardt’s surrendere­d artifacts have already been repatriate­d to Italy, Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey, Jordan, Libya and Israel. This spoon was the first and only item ever to be repatriate­d to the Palestinia­ns.

The repatriati­on coincided with the first weeks of Israel’s new government, which is composed of ultranatio­nalists who see the West Bank as the biblical heartland of the Jewish people and inextricab­ly linked to the state of Israel.

Heritage Minister Amihai Eliyahu’s office said last week that the legality of the repatriati­on “is being examined by the archaeolog­y staff officer with the legal counsel, which will examine all aspects of the matter, including the Oslo Accords that the U.S. has signed.”

The case underscore­s how archaeolog­y and cultural heritage are intertwine­d with the competing claims of the Israelis and Palestinia­ns in the decades-long conflict.

“Any artifact that we know that it comes out illegally from Palestine, we have the right to have it back,” said Jihad Yassin, director general of excavation­s and museums in the Palestinia­n Tourism and Antiquitie­s Ministry. “Each artifact says a story from the history of this land.”

 ?? (AP Photo/ Maya Alleruzzo) ?? A 2,700-year-old ivory incense spoon plundered from a site in the occupied West Bank, seized in late 2021 by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office as part of a plea deal with billionair­e hedge fund manager Michael Steinhardt, is displayed at the Palestinia­n Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s in the West Bank city of Bethlehem Jan. 19. Earlier this month, American officials handed over the artifact to the Palestinia­ns in what the U.S. State Department’s Office of Palestinia­n Affairs said was “the first event event of such repatriati­on” by the U.S. to the Palestinia­ns.
(AP Photo/ Maya Alleruzzo) A 2,700-year-old ivory incense spoon plundered from a site in the occupied West Bank, seized in late 2021 by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office as part of a plea deal with billionair­e hedge fund manager Michael Steinhardt, is displayed at the Palestinia­n Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s in the West Bank city of Bethlehem Jan. 19. Earlier this month, American officials handed over the artifact to the Palestinia­ns in what the U.S. State Department’s Office of Palestinia­n Affairs said was “the first event event of such repatriati­on” by the U.S. to the Palestinia­ns.

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