By Seth Mandel
Tuesday, May 06, 2025
There is a war on history so ruthless and pervasive that
I should say up front that there is, believe it or not, a silver lining. Two,
actually.
But first, the bleak part.
When it comes to Jewish historical sites in the holy
land, even your most “moderate” academic seems to turn into ISIS—a destructive
force seeking a new and permanent dark age.
But because academic archaeological journals aren’t
exactly the stuff of ratings, we don’t hear about it very much unless we go
looking for it. So credit to journalist Amelie Botbol, who has been following
an important story playing out in obscure places.
At Fox News, the Tel Aviv-based Botbol highlights recent stories from an Israeli news service that deserve
attention.
In late April, the Press Service of Israel (TPS) covered the blacklisting of researchers who study ancient sites in
Judea and Samaria, because the area is over the “green line” and thus
considered occupied territory by the UN. Now, one might suggest that, occupied
or not, the preservation and exploration of history is pretty important.
And it is—which is why those who undertake it get
blacklisted if their areas of study encompass Jewish historical sites.
“This boycott is very clever,” Moshe Gutman, head of a
preservation nonprofit, told the news service. “After having publications
rejected repeatedly, archaeologists learn to avoid Judea and Samaria entirely.
The scientific community is effectively driven away from the area.”
Indeed, the story is full of examples of academics and
researchers losing their standing, access, and career paths for the crime of
even participating in studies of ancient Israel. The idea is simple, if
diabolical: Even if a few archaeologists defy the ban, they’ll have nowhere to
publish their findings.
The culprits aren’t shy about the coordination. A few
days after TPS’s first report, the service got on-the-record
confirmation from the top editor of a leading
archaeological journal based in London that covers the Levant. “Publication in
[Palestine Exploration Quarterly] is guided by the PEF’s ethical
policy,” the editor told TPS. “The main aspect of this is international law, by
which many academic institutions and publications, including PEQ, are bound.”
There is one way to publish results from Judea and
Samaria in the journal, however: if the authors “have cooperated with the
relevant Palestinian authorities to do so.”
In other words, get permission from the Palestinian
bureaucrats who are in charge of destroying evidence of Jewish history. And
here’s where the other side of the boycott comes in: “There is no cooperation
with the Palestinian Authority in the field of archaeology in Judea and
Samaria, but not because the Israelis don’t want it,” an archaeologist at
Bar-Ilan University said. “I would love to conduct a joint research with my
Palestinian colleagues…. But it’s impossible because they are afraid to
cooperate with Israelis. They would be treated as traitors for this.”
It’s pure academic segregation, in other words. Botbol
notes that the United Nations and other international forums play a key role in
the denial of history because they have “automatic anti-Israel majorities” for
any votes. Those same authorities turn a blind eye when Jewish sites are
violated, as happened in Jericho. “The burial grounds of Hasmonean kings—the
largest necropolis in the Middle East from the Second Temple period—have been
plowed and used for farming and construction,” an Israeli think tank director
told Botbol. “In one case, we found human bones scattered in the fields. The
Israeli Civil Administration had to collect and rebury them.”
So what are the silver linings? Well, this may come off
as cold comfort, but the most important lesson from all this is that the entire
world knows that Jews are indigenous to the land and that this history is
well-established fact. That includes Palestinians and their advocates—no one in
the world argues in good faith for the “colonialist” interpretation of Zionism.
This is the anti-Semitism version of flat-earth theory.
It exists outside the very idea of knowledge. That is what is so threatening to
the academic world: Their defensiveness is a tacit acknowledgement that the
Palestinian-fueled anti-Zionist narrative of the land is universally regarded
as a made-up story.
If there’s a second silver lining, it’s in the form of a
lesson learned the hard way. Israel is the only trustworthy steward of the
region’s history. Those dark ages the academic world is working so hard to
bring about? The state of Israel is what stands in their way, and it isn’t
going anywhere.
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