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Egypt's Archeologist Attack the Biblical Moses Account

This attack on the biblical account was vigorously renewed by press coverage in July, 2010 when the mainstream U.S. media simultaneously emphasized the story with accompanying pictures of the dig sight. This corresponded with the History Channel's popularizing Zahi Hawass (a Muslim) in a show entitled, "Chasing Mummies." (It should be noted that while the Bible doesn't specify Israel's labor was building pyramids, undermining that perception casts doubt on the validity of the Word in the minds of many.)

 

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2010/01/11/egypt-finds-tombs-of-pyramid-builders-and-more-evidence-they-were-free-men/

Discover Magazine

Science, Technology, and The Future

January 11, 2010

Forget the myths about massive numbers of slaves or Jews building the great pyramids, Egypt's chief archaeologist argues this week. He says Egyptian researchers have found the tombs of more pyramid builders, and in those tombs more evidence that free men erected these monumental tributes to the ancient pharaohs.

Zahi Hawass this week unveiled new research on 4,000-year-old tombs found near the pyramids—tombs he says belonged to pyramid builders. Graves of the pyramid builders were first discovered in the area in 1990 when a tourist on horseback stumbled over a wall that later proved to be a tomb [Canadian Press]. These new ones stretch beyond those previously-discovered tombs, and contain a dozen skeletons.

What matters for the historical interpretation, Hawass stressed, is location, location, location. "These tombs were built beside the king's pyramid, which indicates that these people were not by any means slaves," said Mr Hawass. "If they were slaves, they would not have been able to build their tombs beside their king's" [The Times]. In addition, Hawass says that the walls of the tombs (which the builders probably built for themselves) bear graffiti like "friends of Khufu (a pharaoh)."

For Egyptologists like Dieter Wildung, a former director of Berlin's Egyptian Museum, this is more confirmation than surprise. "The myth of the slaves building pyramids is only the stuff of tabloids and Hollywood.... The world simply could not believe the pyramids were build without oppression and forced labour, but out of loyalty to the pharaohs" [Canadian Press], says Wildung. In particular, Egyptian officials like Hawass, who have national pride at stake, have long pushed against the idea slave-built pyramids, saying it undermines the skill involved in their construction, and the sophistication of ancient Egypt's civilisation [BBC News].

Actually, the slave myth dates back much further than "tabloids and Hollywood," to ancient texts. The Greek historian, Herodotus, visited Egypt several thousand years after Khufu's pyramid was built, he wrote that Khufu forced his people to "labour as slaves for his own advantage" thus prompting the first accounts that the pyramids were built by slaves [The Times]. Legends have also held that Jews worked on the pyramids, and the first century A.D. Jewish historian Josephus includes a mention. But Jews did not arrive in Egypt until long after construction was completed.