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Israeli Students Participate Hands-on in Digging up the Past
One
by one, the eighth graders hop over the iron safety bar, and quickly
descend the steep flight of steps until they are in the bottom of a
giant hole. There, they grab small picks and shovels and get to work
filling buckets with centuries-old dirt. The kids are excited about the
ancient floor they’ve discovered.
“It
is really fun,” Adam Sher, 13, tells The Media Line. “We all have to
work together and it’s so cool that we found the floor.”
“Be careful,” archaeologist Yoni Mizrach warns the students. “You don’t want to damage anything.”
Mizrachi
says the students have enearthed the floor of a Byzantine water cistern
right next to The Experimental School in downtown Jerusalem, where they study.
“What
they find is important, but it’s even more important that they explore
the area that is right around their school,” he told The Media Line.
“This is a different way of teaching history and archaeology. You study
the past, not only in books.”
A
few of the students who are afraid to go down the stairs or say they
are afraid they will feel claustrophobic are made responsible for
emptying the buckets of dirt and sending them back down to their
classmates below. But by the end of the morning, almost everyone has
made it down to the newly-found floor, at least for a little while.
Teacher
Avigail Shoshan says the school’s participation supports the progress
of the archaeological project also has social benefits for the students.
“They
learn to work together in a group,” she told The Media Line. “It also
makes them more connected to the place where they live and study. They
have responsibility for their environment.”
The
project is an initiative of Emek Shaveh, an organization of
archaeologists and community activists which focuses on the role of
archaeology in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“We
view archaeology as a resource for building bridges and strengthening
bonds between different peoples and cultures,” the group’s website says.
“Our fundamental position is that an archaeological find should not and
cannot be used to prove ownership by any one nation, ethnic group or
religion over a given place. We believe that the archaeological find
tells a complex story which is independent of religious dictates.”
Every
Israeli student studies archaeology in primary school, and visits local
archaeological sites, some dating back thousands of years. As the
students from The Experimental School dig, a group of preschoolers stops
by to watch them work.
One
of the participants, 14-year old Miki Vishnai recounted the day’s
events, saying that, “They explained a little about the history of this
place, then they gave us some safety tips and then we started digging.
Everyone cooperated and it was really fun.”
The area where the excavation is located is part of the Mamilla pools, one of several reservoirs that supplied the people of Jerusalem with water during ancient times. It is found in Independence Park, in the modern center of west Jerusalem,
amid rolling green hills and trees. The city has started a project to
develop the area into a cultural center and to encourage young people to
attend concerts and other events there.
Part of the area within the boundaries of the project includes a Muslim cemetery.
“The
cemetery is falling apart and we want to clean it and preserve it,”
architect Itay Aharonson tells the students. “We must respect it.”
The
students take a break and eat the sandwiches they have brought from
home. But they’re anxious to get back to digging. One girl descends the
stairs wearing flip-flops.
“I
told you those shoes are not appropriate and you could get hurt,”
archaeologist Mizrachi tells her. “I know,” she answers, “but just let
me dig for a little while. I promise I’ll be careful.”
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Labels: Archaeology, Heritage, Israel
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