Don’t mess around with nature

Ferrell Jenkins's avatarFerrell's Travel Blog

Shmuel Browns has a nice article here on Agamon (Hula) Lake in northern Israel. Perhaps we all know that Lake Hula (Hulah; Huleh) is the small body of water about 10 miles north of the Sea of Galilee.

Browns tells how the lake came to be drained a few decades back, and the reason for its reclamation. I was especially impressed with the number of “creatures” found in the area around the lake. And also of the number of species lost as a result of the draining of the lake.

Josephus refers to Lake Hula by the Roman name of Lake Semechonitis (Ant. 5.199; Jewish Wars 3:515; 4:3).

My earliest association for the site (about 60 years ago) was to identify it as the Waters of Merom (Joshua 11), because this is what Hurlbut suggested in A Bible Atlas. This identification is doubtful, and many modern atlases…

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42 – Jackie Robinson

42 – Jackie Robinson

Jackie Robinson

Bette and I saw “42” this afternoon, and while it’s not my habit to recommend Hollywood versions of history, or movies generally, this one merits some attention.  Below is a review from the “Plugged In” website which catches most of the good, the bad, and the ugly.  Full of teachable moments and a humanly inspiring storyline, this is an example of how a good movie can be made without gratuitous sex, violence, and profanity.  There are a few curse words (not nearly as many as you would hear at any major-league ballpark or even high school sporting event), but religious concepts are not ignored and indeed, taken seriously in several instances. Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the language is the repeated (50 may be a low estimate) usage of the word “ni***r” hurled as a repeated epithet.  It is amazing how linguistic social mores (among other things) have changed in little more than a half-century — just a few decades ago, racial epithets and ethnic slurs (a few of those are in “42” as well) were commonly accepted language in many place in public American culture, while taking the Lord’s name in vain or the use of sexual, vulgar, or scatological  terms were frowned upon and occasionally publicly rebuked. Now the reverse seems to be true. This film is full of “teachable moments.”

42

42

  • In 1945, the Allies celebrated their victory over the Axis powers of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan. Back home in the Allied superpower of the United States of America, however, a battle for freedom on another front still raged: the battle against racism.

President Abraham Lincoln had signed the Emancipation Proclamation 82 years before. But segregation still separated blacks from whites. African-Americans were forced to use separate restrooms in many places; to sit at the back of buses; and to stay away from designated hotels, restaurants and businesses—not to mention enduring bruising verbal slurs as well as threats of violence … or actual assaults.

White baseball players, for instance, competed in Major League Baseball. Black athletes, meanwhile, were relegated to the Negro League. Never did the two worlds intersect.

Until, that is, one brave team owner decided it was time for a change. Time for an end to segregation on the ball field. “I don’t know who he is,” Brooklyn Dodgers owner Branch Rickey tells his front office management team in the spring of 1945, “or where he is. But he’s coming.” The he in question? MLB’s first black player—a player Rickey was determined to recruit.

On the surface, Rickey’s motivation seems driven by money. “New York’s full of negro baseball fans,” he explains. “Dollars aren’t black and white. They’re green.” But it turns out there’s more to Rickey’s barrier-shattering decision than that.

A year later, the Dodgers have found their man, a base-stealing slugger from the Negro League’s Kansas City Monarchs. His name is Jackie Robinson. When one of Rickey’s men points out that Robinson was court-martialed and dishonorably discharged from the Army, Rickey counters that it was because Robinson refused to submit to unfair treatment. “If he were white,” Rickey says, “we’d call that spirit.”

Spirit is something Robinson will need as he faces resistance at every turn. On the field. In hotels. In airports. Even on his own team (first as a player for the minor league Montreal Royals in 1946, then as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947). It’s a barrier-busting role that will demand courage, Rickey tells Robinson at the outset: the courage not to retaliate.

“You want a player who doesn’t have the guts to fight back?” Robinson demands.

“No,” Rickey says. “I want a player who’s got the guts not to fight back.”

“You give me a uniform, you give me a number on my back, and I’ll give you the guts,” Robinson promises.

And in so doing he becomes one of the most decorated soldiers ever to fight in that homegrown battle against prejudice and racial hate.

Positive Elements

Robinson and Rickey both exhibit tremendous amounts of courage. Robinson has to endure prejudice from players and fans. He’s demeaned with the n-word, has baseballs thrown at his head, has to flee from a mob, etc. Rickey, for his part, comes in for criticism, too, regarding his revolutionary decision to add a black player to the roster. He never backs down, and he threatens to trade any player who can’t deal with Robinson’s presence. (When a ballplayer comes to Rickey with a threatening letter that’s been written to him, the Dodgers’ owner pulls out two huge files of similar letters he’s received.)

Rickey wisely coaches Robinson’s response to racist attacks. The owner knows Robinson will be subjected to a different set of rules, namely that he can’t retaliate. “Your enemy will be out in force,” Rickey advises, “and you cannot meet him on his own low ground.”

When Robinson laments his critics’ slurs, Rickey responds, “These men have to live with themselves.” Robinson hints at quitting, and Rickey tells him that he can’t, because of all the people who “need you, respect you and believe in you.” And, slowly, Robinson’s grit, integrity and athleticism win him allies on the team and in the broader culture.

Standing with Robinson in his struggle are his devoted wife, Rachel; and a young, black Pittsburgh Courier sports reporter named Wendell Smith. Rachel flinches when Robinson is hit with a pitch, but—despite tears—she never flinches from the bigger struggle to desegregate pro baseball. Wendell tells Robinson about his struggles with segregation, namely that he’s not allowed to sit in the press box. “You, Mr. Robinson,” he says, “are not the only one with something at stake here.”

Manager Leo Durocher defends Jackie’s right to play ball. And a teammate named Pee Wee Reese publically puts his arm across Robinson’s shoulders as a statement of solidarity. Reese says of his racist fans and family in the stands, “I need them to know who I am.”

Many other inspiring moments turn up throughout the film. A white man tells Robinson, “I’m pulling for you to make good. If a man’s got the goods, he deserves to get a fair chance.” Rickey tells Robinson a story about seeing a white kid emulating some of Robinson’s trademark actions. “He was pretending to be you,” Rickey says. “A little white boy was pretending to be a black man.”

Jackie Robinson isn’t just brave when it comes to baseball, by the way. He tells his newborn son, “My daddy left us flat in Cairo, Ga. I was only six months older than you are now. I don’t remember him. Nothing good. Nothing bad. Nothing. You will remember me. I’m gonna be with you until the day I die.”

[Spoiler Warning] Rickey eventually tells Robinson that what motivated him to bring an African-American into the Majors was the fact that he’d failed to defend a black player from being treated unfairly many years before, and that the guilt of it had haunted him ever since. “It was something unfair at the heart of the game I loved,” he says, adding that he pushed the thought of it away until “time came when I could no longer ignore it.” Then this: “You helped me love baseball again.”

Spiritual Content

References to God and Scripture turn up regularly. Some are lighthearted: Rickey says, “Robinson’s a Methodist. I’m a Methodist. God’s a Methodist.” And he tells Robinson, “Run those bases like the devil himself. Put the natural fear of God in them.” Rickey also lobs, “For the love of Peter,” “Judas priest” and “What in Satan’s fire does he want!?”

Others are deeply felt: Rickey tells Robinson, “Like our Savior, you’ve got to have the guts to turn the other cheek.” Later, Rickey suggests to Robinson that he’s a living, breathing sermon illustration in his willingness not to retaliate against those who taunt him.

With Robinson at the plate, a boy in the stands prays to God that Robinson can show everyone “what he can do.” Near the end of the film, we hear Sister Wynona Carr’s song “The Ball Game,” which describes a Christian’s journey through life in baseball terms.

Sexual Content

Robinson kisses his wife’s chest while she’s wearing a camisole. A suggestive comment is made about him sleeping with white players’ wives. He’s not. But Durocher is having an affair with an actress. They’re shown in bed. (He’s shirtless, she’s wearing a bra.) Then, in a phone conversation with Durocher, Rickey says, “The Bible has a thing or two to say about adultery.” And Rickey ends up firing the man for his indiscretion when a Catholic organization threatens to boycott the Dodgers.

Men are shown in boxers. Locker room scenes show players in showers (from the shoulders up) and with towels wrapped around their waists. Self-conscious jokes accompany a moment of gracious magnanimity when a white player invites Robinson to shower with the rest of the team. There’s talk of periods and pregnancy.

Violent Content

Robinson gets hit in the head by a pitch; a bench-clearing brawl ensues. Another player intentionally spikes Robinson’s ankle with his cleats; we see Robison getting his leg stitched up. A white man comes to the house where Robinson is staying during spring training and tells him there’s a mob organizing. As Robinson and Wendall are leaving town, a group of men walks menacingly out of a bar toward their car.

Robinson and other teammates receive hostile letters—including death threats. After being repeatedly called a “n-gger,” Robinson walks into the tunnel behind the dugout where he privately breaks a bat in frustration.

Crude or Profane Language

One use each of the s-word, “a‑‑” and “b‑‑tard.” God’s name gets paired with “d‑‑n” four or five times. We hear “b‑‑ch” about that same number of times.

At games, fans and opposing players hurl the epithet “n-gger” at Robinson so many times it’s hard to keep up with a count; a conservative estimate would be somewhere in the neighborhood of 50. A guy makes a racist comment about Jews.

Drug and Alcohol Content

Rickey always has a cigar in hand. Several scenes show men drinking beer.

Conclusion

I always knew Jackie Robinson was an important figure in the history of professional baseball. But before watching 42, I don’t think I really grasped just how trailblazing Robinson’s presence was. His willingness to endure taunts, threats, intimidation and violence, all without responding in kind, was nothing short of awe-inspiring. Similarly remarkable, in a behind-the-scenes kind of way, was Branch Rickey’s willingness to recruit Robinson in the first place, then stand behind his man the whole way, coaching and encouraging him not to give up.

Indeed, 42 is drenched in inspiration, in part because it doesn’t shy away from realistically depicting the kind of resistance Robinson and Rickey were up against. There’s a downside to that kind of approach, of course. Casual profanity ebbs and flows through the narrative, and a bit of suggestive sexual material is included too. But the film’s many uses of the n-word aren’t unleashed loosely or lightly, and they land like the stinging crack of a verbal whip, a wince-inducing reminder of racism’s harsh history in our country. Especially heartbreaking is a scene when a man in the stand starts spitting the slur at Robinson … encouraging his young son to do the same. Robinson’s ability to bear up under such abuse seriously reinforced my sense of just how heroic his perseverance really was.

And the litany of this film’s teachable moments doesn’t stop there. Robinson is a loving and faithful husband, a father who wants to do better than his own dad did and someone who relies on his faith to make it through. The latter is also true in Branch Rickey’s case, whether he’s quoting Scripture, alluding to Jesus or telling an adulterous manager to reconsider his immoral ways. In the end, these two men’s faith and fortitude forged a path for others to follow, forever ending segregation in baseball and challenging racism in the culture at large along the way.

Syrian archaeological site endangered — a look at Ebla

Ferrell Jenkins's avatarFerrell's Travel Blog

During the course of the bloody civil war in Syria we have heard of damage to various archaeological sites such as Aleppo and Palmyra. A recent article in The New York Timeshere includes a report specific to Tell Mardikh in northern Syria, about 30 miles SW of Aleppo.

The headline tells the story, “Grave Robbers and War Steal Syria’s History.” An excellent video illustrates what both of these factors (vandalism and war) are doing to destroy the ancient site.

We have previously written about Ebla, and the Ebla tablets, here, and here.

More than 17,000 cuneiform tablets were discovered in 1975. They date to the mid-third millennium B.C. when Ebla was the capital of a great Canaanite empire. Scholars state that there are important affinities between the Eblaite language and biblical Hebrew, both being members of the Northwest Semitic family.

The first golden age of Ebla is dated…

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Mysterious structure in the Sea of Galilee

Ferrell Jenkins's avatarFerrell's Travel Blog

Scientists report the discovery of a mysterious structure in the Sea of Galilee on the SW “corner” near the site of Bet Yerah.

According to Live Sciencehere, this structure is made of large basalt blocks. These volcanic stones are common in the region.

A giant “monumental” stone structure discovered beneath the waters of the Sea of Galilee in Israel has archaeologists puzzled as to its purpose and even how long ago it was built.

The mysterious structure is cone shaped, made of “unhewn basalt cobbles and boulders,” and weighs an estimated 60,000 tons the researchers said. That makes it heavier than most modern-day warships.

Rising nearly 32 feet (10 meters) high, it has a diameter of about 230 feet (70 meters). To put that in perspective, the outer stone circle of Stonehenge has a diameter just half that with its tallest stones not reaching that height.

You…

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Natural Disasters

Natural Disasters

From “Hankering for History” —

Alright everybody, here is an article from the guys over at HistoricNaturalDisasters.com! They are finishing up a photo project for the centennial of the series of floods and tornadoes that devastated the Midwest in March of 1913. They need help matching “unknown location” images to current locations. The best part is that there is a $100 cash prize for one lucky winner that participates in the contest. So check out the article, then check out the contest information below. Enjoy!

From March 21st to the 27th, 1913, the United States experienced a series of late winter storms that together led to one of the worst natural disasters in US history – but one that is rarely talked about today. Starting in Nebraska and then northern Ohio and spreading out to affect states as far away as New York and Louisiana, these storms brought tornadoes and later flooding to a large swath of the Midwest and parts of the East coast, and changed how many cities prepare and react to natural disasters.

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24th Lake, 1913

24th_lake_today

24th Lake, 2013

From March 21st through the 23rd, 1913, tornadoes originating in Nebraska ripped across these states as well as Louisiana, Alabama, Kansas, and Georgia. Nebraska, however, was the hardest hit. On the 23rd, Easter Sunday, a tornado sliced through the middle of downtown Omaha before traveling over the border in Council Bluffs, Iowa and dying off. What was left in Omaha after the storm was at risk of burning due to fires that were spreading through the city, fed by broken gas lines. The destruction to the city was extensive by the time the dust had settled, with the Omaha Daily News reporting that damages were in excess of $8 million ($187 million today) and that 115 had been killed.

After the tornadoes had done their damage, the rains came, originating from the same weather systems that had spawned the twisters. As the storms moved over northern Ohio, particularly in the Great Miami watershed area, it rained constantly from March 21st to the 26th. Major river towns such as Columbus, Memphis, Pittsburgh, Albany, and Philadelphia were among those eventually flooded.

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134 West Fourth, 1913

134_west_fourth_today

134 West Forth, 2013

Dayton, Ohio, experienced the worst flooding of all. Dayton was built in the banks of the Great Miami River and had experienced flooding in the past, but nothing as devastating as what occurred on March 25, when the levees along the Great Miami started to break, sending water rushing into the streets. According to the Ohio Historical Society, by the next day the downtown area was in up to 20 feet of water. The exact figures vary depending on the source, but according to the Miami Conservancy District, an estimated 360 people were killed and the property damage in Dayton totaled over $100 million ($2 billion today).

As the storms moved east into Indiana they showed no signs of slowing down. A tornado had already passed through Terra Haute on the 23rd, killing 21, and the state experienced heavy flooding for the remainder of the week. In Indianapolis, the levees around the west side of the city broke, and it was filled with nearly 30 feet of water. The White Water River in Brookville was so high that some bridges acted like dams, slowing the water’s flow. When these bridges broke under the pressure, a tidal wave roared down the river for miles, engulfing Cedar Grove and New Trenton. In Indiana alone there were over than 180 bridges completely destroyed by the raging waters.

There is no definitive way to know for certain how many lives were lost during this terrible week of tornadoes and floods, but estimates typically range into the thousands. In Dayton, cleanup efforts would take more than a year and the economy would not recover fully for over a decade.

fourth_main_1913

Fourth and Main, 1913

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Fourth and Main, 2013

Not everything that came from the storm was negative, however. The Great Dayton Flood was viewed afterward as the ultimate field training for the then newly formed Red Cross, their first large-scale test before being sent to aid wounded troops overseas during World War I. The concept of the “community chest” charity emerged from volunteer efforts in Cleveland during the 1913 floods, and would later become known as the United Way.

Thanks so much to Hankering for History for letting us share a piece of this historical project on HankeringForHistory.com. We’re humbled by the interest in this project, and we really hope you enjoyed this snippet of history!

We’d also like to thank some of the great archives and archivists who have done so much work to help preserve the amazing history of the 1913 flood, including the Dayton Metro Library and historian Trudy Bell. The amount of history compiled at these two websites is truly amazing. Lastly, thanks to Jason from InsuranceTown.com, who lent us some of the resources we used to help prepare content for the web and publish our blog, and inspired our Mapping History Contest.

Don’t forget to check out HistoricNaturalDisasters.com for more images, and for information on our Mapping History Contest – help us figure out the locations pictured in historic photos from 1913 and you could win $100!

Read more: http://www.hankeringforhistory.com/2013/04/05/historic-natural-disasters-guest-post/#ixzz2PvlJ5whV

British Excavation at Ur

British Excavation at Ur

Ancient Sumerian site excavated

Excavation of Tell Kahiber

Ferrell Jenkins's avatarFerrell's Travel Blog

Mike Addelman, Press Officer of the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Manchester, has been kind enough to provide us with some photos of the recent excavation of Tell Kahiber.

Some of us might easily drive past the ancient mound without realizing that it was an ancient archaeological site. Prof. Stuart Campbell and Dr. Jane Moore, both of Manchester University, and independent archaeologist Robert Killick, first recognized important features of the tell on satellite images.

Tell Kahiber is located close to Tell Mugheir, thought by some scholars to be the biblical Ur of the Chaldeans, the home of Abraham (Genesis 11:28-31; 15:7). Historically we know this area to be Sumer. The following map from Bible Atlas shows the general area.

The New International Dictionary of Biblical Archaeology points out,

There are no direct references to Sumer in the Bible, although it corresponds to the “land of Shinar”…

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Stephen Jenks – Singing Master

Stephen Jenks – Singing Master.

Huberman’s List: Saved from the Holocaust

Huberman’s List: Saved from the Holocaust

Footnote 14 – Chandra Manning, What This Cruel War Was Over: Soldiers, Slavery, and the Civil War

Footnote 14 – Chandra Manning, What This Cruel War Was Over: Soldiers, Slavery, and the Civil War (New York:  Vintage/Random House, 2008), p. 3

“The fact that slavery is the sole undeniable cause of this infamous rebellion, that it is a war of, by and for Slavery, is as plain as the noon-day sun.” So claimed the farmers, shopkeepers, and laborers who made up the Thirteeenth Wisconsin Infantry Regiment in February 1862.  The white Southerners of Morgan’s Confederate Brigade might not have seen eye to eye with the Wisconsin men on much in 1862, but they agreed that “any man who pretends to believe that this is not a war for the emancipation of the blacks … is either a fool or a liar.”  Two years later, black men in the Fourteenth Rhode Island Heavy Artillery reminded each other, “upon your prowess, discipline, and character; depend the destinies of four millions of people and the triumph of the principles of freedom and self-government of this great republic.”

This quotation references, among other sources, the Wisconsin Volunteer (newspaper of the 13th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment), February 6, 1862, p. 3, from Kansas State Historical Society Archives; The Vidette (newspaper of Morgan’s Confederate Brigade, Springfield, TN), November 2, 1862, p. 3, from Tennessee State Library and Archives.