Excavation, Earthmoving and Archaeological Practice in
Israel
by Ralph Harrington
Greycat.org
January 30, 2007
http://www.greycat.org/papers/archaeo.htm
THE SCIENCE OF
ARCHAEOLOGY is concerned with the past, but it
exists in the present, and is shaped by the social,
cultural and political context within which it is
practised. Historically, nationalism has proved a
particularly significant influence upon archaeology.[1]
‘It can be argued that there is an almost unavoidable or
natural relationship between archaeology and
nationalism', write Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett in
the introduction to their edited collection
Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of Archaeology
(1995); they go on to observe ‘that this relationship is
not necessarily corrupt or intrinsically suspect'.[2]
Both terms of this observation are very pertinent to
consideration of the development of archaeology in
Israel, where Zionism, an ideology that can be regarded
as broadly nationalist, has historically shaped the
development of Israeli archaeology.[3]
Before
the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948,
archaeology in Palestine had overwhelmingly been carried
out by European and North American individuals and
institutions whose priority was the investigation of the
archaeological evidence for the events described in the
Christian Bible.[4]
Numerous excavations and surveys sought to confirm the
truth of the Old and New Testament accounts of Holy Land
history from the Bronze Age to the Roman period. The
Jewish past of Palestine was, of course, a vital element
in the ‘Biblical archaeology' project, but was subsumed
into an overwhelmingly Christian-determined
archaeological approach rather than being investigated
for its own sake. For Zionists, the lack of a
distinctively Jewish archaeology was an omission that
needed to be rectified; an archaeology of Jewish
Palestine ‘was promoted by the Zionist movement to
heighten national consciousness and strengthen Israeli
ties to the land they were settling'.[5]
During the period of the British Mandate in Palestine
(1920-48) ‘a distinctive nationalist variant of Western
nationalist archaeology was already crystallising within
the Jewish community of Palestine'.[6]
From
the middle of the twentieth century the Biblical
archaeology of the European and American Christian
tradition was increasingly challenged by the secular,
nationalistic Jewish archaeology associated with the
newly-established State of Israel:
As archaeologists
fastened their practice to the narrative of, first,
Biblical archaeology and later, Jewish history, they
sought to make manifest in the land around them the
evidence required to demonstrate what they saw as
the necessary warrant for Jewish claims to the land
of Palestine/Israel: earlier and uninterrupted
habitation by peoples who might be recognized as
forming an Israelite nation.[7]
The ‘official'
archaeology practised in Israel after 1948 was
significantly political and nationalistic in character,
developing during the 1950s and 1960s into ‘a central
pillar of the Israeli secular identity'.[8]
That Israeli archaeology during this period was secular
rather than religious in character reflected the
ideological attitude of the State of Israel generally
during this period;[9]
but in addition, by offering both a link to the
ancestral past of the Jewish people and a demonstration
of Israel's modern scientific and scholarly credentials,
archaeology transcended the religious/secular divide in
Israeli society and established a broad appeal across a
wide spectrum of constituencies from the religious and
traditionalist to the secular and modernist.[10]
Thus,
the nationalistic agenda of Zionism strongly influenced
Israeli archaeology after 1948, and suffused the
significance of archaeology in wider Israeli culture.
The context for archaeological investigation was itself
shaped by the almost continuous experience of war and
conflict during the formative years of Israel, and the
programmes of construction and territorial
transformation that influenced the Israeli physical
environment. Archaeological investigation went
hand-in-hand with the reconstruction of urban centres
and the extension of settlement, and – perhaps most
significantly – the acquisition, as a consequence of
war, of additional territory, often in areas deeply
resonant with significance for Jewish history and
identity. The 1967 war in particular was interpreted as
‘a war of redemption of the ancient land … [which]
turned land and stones into sacred beings'.[11]
It is this conjunction of war, ideology and territory
that makes the bulldozer a controversial presence in the
field of Israeli archaeology.
In
her recent book Facts on the Ground: Archaeological
Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning in Israeli
Society (2003), anthropologist Nadia Abu El-Haj
lays much emphasis on the role of the bulldozer in
Israeli archaeology. Indeed, she argues that the
bulldozer is the characteristic tool of Israeli
archaeology, symbolizing and realizing an archaeological
approach driven by the identity politics of what she
interprets as the ‘nationalist-colonialist' ideology of
Zionism:
Among Palestinian
officials … as well as many other archaeologists –
Palestinian and European or American (trained) – the
use of bulldozers has become the ultimate sign of
‘bad science' and of nationalist politics guiding
research agendas. Critics situate this practice
squarely within (a specific understanding of) the
politics of a nationalist tradition of
archaeological research. In other words, bulldozers
are used in order to get down to the earlier strata,
which are saturated with national significance, as
quickly as possible (Iron Age through early-Roman).[12]
Abu El-Haj records that
‘bulldozers' were used by Israeli archaeologists on a
dig at Jezreel upon which she worked herself, causing
deep concern among British and American archaeologists
who disagreed with this method of excavation – although
she explains in a footnote that she did not witness the
bulldozer incident herself, but had it reported to her
by a number of others who had been present.[13]
The
claim that Israel practices ‘bulldozer archaeology' is
an explosive one and draws on images of
ideologically-driven Israeli destructiveness that are
deeply rooted in contemporary Palestinian perceptions.
In accusing Israeli archaeologists of ‘commonly' using
bulldozers on excavation sites in Israel, Abu El-Haj is
articulating what Sandra Arnold Scham has described as
‘a powerful and widespread notion', the presence of
which, Scham claims, reflects the fact that ‘in terms of
methodology and interpretation, Arab, Islamic, and
additionally Byzantine and Crusader, remains have in the
past been disregarded if not destroyed' by Israeli
archaeology.[14]
Scham agrees with Philip Kohl that the physical
bulldozing of such remains has actually occurred ‘only
in a few exceptional cases',[15]
but demonstrates that the perception that such
destructive action does frequently occur at Israeli
hands is itself highly significant and revealing.
Against this background, Palestinian activists and their
sympathizers can be said to be very ready, first, to
believe that Israeli archaeologists do obliterate
non-Jewish remains using bulldozers as a matter of
normal practice, and second, to relate that perception
to a complex of other deeply-rooted beliefs about
Israel's repressive and violent policies towards
Palestinian populations and towards the notion of
Palestinian nationhood itself.
Nadia
Abu El-Haj clearly identifies with this ideological
position herself. For her, the alleged ‘bulldozer
archaeology' of the Israelis is symbolic of the
ideological character of the ‘nationalist-colonialist'
Israeli state and the necessarily brutal business of
imposing Zionist claims upon the territory of Palestine:
The earth has to be
carved up in particular ways in order for the
objects of archaeology to become visible, not simply
by transforming absence into presence, but, more
specifically, by creating particular angles of
vision through which landscapes are remade. How one
goes about hewing the land tells us something about
what kinds of objects archaeologists deem to be
significant (to be worthy of being observed).
Moreover, it determines which (kinds of) objects
come forth from the excavated land. History was
made, and a new material culture produced from, this
dialectic between the kind of history these digs
sought to recover and the practical work of
excavating itself.[16]
Thus Abu El-Haj's
argument is that this project of ‘remaking' the
landscape, spatially and temporally, requires that the
archaeological remains uncovered and identified in a
particular region be fitted into a pre-determined
framework of interpretation, and that material that can
not be accommodated in that framework be ‘cleared away'.
This, she claims, is where the bulldozer becomes the
characteristic tool of Israeli archaeology, cutting
through (and destroying) layers of material that has
been classified a priori as unimportant in
accordance with the ideological requirements of Zionism.
Abu
El-Haj's book has been embraced by critics of Israel and
has received sympathetic reviews in some academic
journals; others, however, have found fault with her
knowledge of archaeological methodology, her
unwillingness to acknowledge changes in Israeli
archaeology since the 1970s, and the extent to which an
anti-Israeli bias has influenced her work.[17]
She has also been accused of selectivity in condemning
Israeli use of bulldozers but ignoring the well-attested
mechanized destruction of antiquities and archaeological
remains that has occurred at the hands of Islamic
authorities on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.[18]
In terms of the reception of Facts on the Ground
overall, it is notable that, of the many critiques of
Israeli archaeology that Abu El-Haj offers, it is the
accusations of bulldozer archaeology that have proven
most controversial and have provoked the most
wide-ranging and polemical debate.
The
notion of bulldozer archaeology is so shocking largely
because the classic image of archaeologists at work is
one of painstaking care, precision and slowness: the
earth delicately probed with hand-held trowels, soil
gently cleaned from each find with brushes, every stage
of the excavation carefully recorded with notes,
drawings and photography. As an arena of human activity
an archaeological dig would seem to be conceptually
closer to an operating theatre than to a construction or
demolition site. Yet large-scale as well as small-scale
operations have their place in archaeology, and the
carefully planned archaeological use of mechanized earth
moving techniques, including bulldozing, is an
established and accepted practice. Standard textbooks
and reference works in archaeology describe the practice
of applying appropriate techniques of excavation to
different recovery levels of a dig: ‘Thus the topsoil
might be removed by a mechanical excavator … and the
surface of the site then cleaned with a shovel'.[19]
Mechanical
earthmoving in archaeology is an accepted means of
rapidly removing material which overlies levels
identified as of interest to the excavators. As a
technique it came into its own in the 1960s when the
availability of increasingly adaptable and effective
earthmoving machinery coincided with growing interest in
the social and economic evidence accessible through
archaeological investigation (reflected in the move
towards ‘open area' digs in which large areas would be
opened simultaneously instead of in stages) and the
increasing prominence of ‘rescue archaeology' in which
excavation had to be carried out in a limited time.
Gavin Lucas, writing in 2001, noted that mechanical
excavators ‘were being occasionally used on sites by the
1940s, but chiefly in a rescue context and often just to
cut sections or long trenches', and that it was the
1960s which had greatly stimulated their use ‘to the
extent that there are few sites dug today which do not
employ a mechanical excavator to take off the
overburden'.[20]
However,
the nature of the various technologies of mechanical
earthmoving, and the language used to describe them,
become crucial issues here. The bulldozer, a tracked
tractor with a large blade held near-perpendicular to
the ground surface, is not a particularly suitable
machine for use in an archaeological application: it is
generally too heavy, cumbersome, imprecise and
inflexible (as well as being expensive and complex to
hire and deploy). Bulldozer blades have a place in
archaeology, removing large quantities of overburden at
the very beginnings of a dig, but for the vast majority
of archaeological work different machines are used.
Particularly useful are variations on the wheeled or
tracked bucket excavator, particularly the tractor-based
machine equipped with a rear-mounted hydraulic boom,
known as the backhoe excavator or (particularly
in Britain, after the most successful manufacturer of
such equipment) the JCB. In the text quoted
above, Lucas writes of mechanical excavators being used
‘to cut sections or long trenches'; bulldozers, with
their inflexible heavy blades, are not ideal for either
of these applications, but the JCB, with its variety of
trenching tools and buckets and its hydraulic boom
capable both of great power and great delicacy, is very
suitable. Abu El-Haj's account of the use of a
‘bulldozer' in the Jezreel dig ‘to more quickly
determine the direction and structure of the Iron Age
moat' gives rise to the suspicion that the machine used
was not in fact a bulldozer but was an excavator of the
JCB type, for this activity clearly involved precise
digging and a bulldozer cannot dig, precisely or
otherwise. The archaeologist who headed the Jezreel
excavation, Professor David Usshiskin, has confirmed, in
an internet posting dealing in detail with some of Abu
El-Haj's claims, that this was indeed the case:
I believe the use
of a JCB to determine the line of the rock-cut Iron
Age moat was justified. It was essential to
establish the size of the Iron Age enclosure in
order to understand properly the site … A JCB with a
long arm working delicately under archaeological
supervision was the right solution: it can do useful
work without damaging ancient remains, and I believe
that this was the case here.[21]
In
general non-technical discourse the term ‘bulldozer' is
frequently applied in a loose way to a wide range of
earthmoving vehicles, whether they are tracked or
wheeled, are equipped with blade or bucket, or are
designed for excavation or for grading; and to place
such emphasis on the distinction between the bulldozer
and the JCB may seem to belong to the realm of the
trainspotter rather than the scholar. The fact is,
however, that in this context the distinction between
the two types of machine is important, and it is not
unreasonable to expect a serious scholar to acquaint
herself with that distinction and use the correct term
in a responsible way, particularly as she is attaching
such weight to the point she is trying to make with her
account of Israeli ‘bulldozer archaeology'. Equally,
however, it is true that her point is given added
emphasis by her use of the word ‘bulldozer', a word
which is heavily laden with symbolic significance,
particularly in the context of Israel/Palestine. It
makes for a much more memorable and effective
denunciation of Israeli archaeology to accuse excavators
of using bulldozers – conjuring up images of 60-ton
steel behemoths with colossal blades grinding
Palestine's heritage beneath their tracks – than to
report that they used a JCB to dig trenches and remove
topsoil, like archaeologists the world over.
Nadia
Abu El-Haj's distorted picture of Israeli archaeological
practice is not simply a matter of confusion over
technical terms, but a conscious strategy of
ideologically-motivated misrepresentation. The essential
point is that Abu El-Haj's target is not Israeli
archaeology at all, but the existence of Israel itself.
She describes the main purpose of her book as
‘analyz[ing] the significance of archaeology to the
Israeli state and society and the role it played in the
formation and enactment of its colonial-national
historical imagination and in the substantiation of its
territorial claims', and exploring the contribution of
archaeology to shaping ‘the contours of the so-called
"new Hebrew" nation and citizenry' in Palestine.[22]
Israel, for Abu El-Haj, is an invention, an artificial
colonial enterprise driven by an ideology, Zionism,
within which colonialism and nationalism are
intrinsically linked. Facts on the Ground is
devoted to her argument that the nationalist
archaeological tradition of the Jewish State since 1948
has played a fundamental role in inventing and
sustaining the interrelated fictions of ancient and
modern Israel. It is as a symbolic epitome of that
claim, rather than for itself, that her notion of
‘bulldozer archaeology' is important to her argument;
and on those grounds the archaeological bulldozers of
her imagination must be dismissed as an
ideologically-driven fiction themselves.
[This essay forms
part of an ongoing study of the cultural history of the
bulldozer, and is very much a work in progress.]
Notes
1.
Bruce G. Trigger, ‘Alternative archaeologies:
nationalist, colonialist, imperialist', Man,
new series, vol. 19, no. 3 (1984), p. 356; Neil Asher
Silberman, Between Past and Present: Archaeology,
Ideology and Nationalism in the Modern Middle East
(New York: Henry Holt, 1989), p. 10.
2.
Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett, ‘Archaeology in the
service of the state: theoretical considerations', in
Philip L. Kohl and Clare Fawcett (eds.),
Nationalism, Politics and the Practice of Archaeology
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), p. 3.
3.
An illuminating and balanced account of the
establishment of Israeli archaeology is Raz Kletter,
Just Past? The Making of Israeli Archaeology
(London: Equinox, 2005).
4.
Neil Asher Silberman, Digging for God and Country:
Exploration, Archaeology and the Secret Struggle for the
Holy Land, 1700-1917 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
1982); Neil Asher Silberman, ‘Desolation and
restoration: the impact of a Biblical concept on Near
Eastern archaeology', Biblical Archaeologist,
vol. 54, no. 2 (June 1991), pp. 76-87; Thomas W. Davis,
Shifting Sands: the Rise and Fall of Biblical
Archaeology (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2004); Bruce G. Trigger, A History of Archaeological
Thought (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1989; 2nd edn., 2006), pp. 272-3.
5.
Trigger, Archaeological Thought, p. 273.
6.
Neil Asher Silberman, ‘If I forget thee, O Jerusalem:
archaeology, religious commemoration and nationalism in
a disputed city, 1801-2001', Nations and Nationalism,
vol. 7, no. 4 (October 2001), p. 496.
7.
Stefan Helmreich, ‘Spatializing technoscience: the
anthropology of science and technology, and the making
of national, colonial, and postcolonial space and
place', Reviews in Anthropology, vol. 32, no. 1
(January 2003), p. 15.
8.
Rachel S. Hallote & Alexander H. Joffe, ‘The politics of
Israeli archaeology: between "nationalism" and "science"
in the age of the Second Republic', Israel Studies,
vol. 7, no. 3 (2002), p. 86.
9.
William G. Dever, ‘American Palestinian and Biblical
archaeology: end of an era?', in Alice B. Kehoe and Mary
Beth Emmerichs (eds.), Assembling the Past: Studies
in the Professionalization of Archaeology
(Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 1999),
p. 97.
10.
Hallote & Joffe, ‘Politics of Israeli archaeology', pp.
86-8.
11.
Idith Zertal, ‘From the People's Hall to the Wailing
Wall: a study in memory, fear, and war',
Representations, no. 69 (Winter 2000), p. 113; see
also Arye Naor, ‘"Behold, Rachel, behold": the Six Day
War as a Biblical experience and its impact on Israel's
political mentality', Journal of Israeli History,
vol. 24, no. 2 (September 2005), pp. 229-50.
12.
Nadia Abu El-Haj, Facts on the Ground:
Archaeological Practice and Territorial Self-Fashioning
in Israeli Society (Chicago, IL: University of
Chicago Press, 2001), p. 148.
13.
Abu El-Haj, Facts on the Ground, p. 306, note
12. Abu El-Haj also discusses this incident in her
article ‘Translating truths: nationalism, the practice
of archaeology, and the remaking of past and present in
contemporary Jerusalem', American Ethnologist,
vol. 25, no. 2 (May 1998), pp. 171-2, 183-4 notes 17,
18, 21-23, in which she presents a more nuanced account
of the use of ‘bulldozers' in archaeology than she does
in the later and more polemical Facts on the Ground.
14.
Sandra Arnold Scham, ‘The archaeology of the
disenfranchised', Journal of Archaeological Method
and Theory, vol. 8, no. 2 (June 2001), p. 204.
15.
Philip L. Kohl, ‘The material culture of the modern era
in the ancient Orient: suggestions for further work', in
Daniel Miller, Michael Rowlands and Christopher Tilley
(eds.), Domination and Resistance (London:
Routledge, 1995), p. 241.
16.
Abu El-Haj, Facts on the Ground, p. 148.
17.
See critical reviews by Jacob Lassner, Middle East
Quarterly, vol. 10, no. 3 (Summer 2003), pp. 79-82;
Aren Maeir, ISIS: Journal of the History of Science
in Society, vol. 95, no. 3 (September 2004), pp.
523-4; Alexander H. Joffe, Journal of Near Eastern
Studies, vol. 64, no. 4 (October 2004), pp.
297-304. More sympathetic assessments can be found in
Margarita Díaz-Andrew, Antiquity, vol. 76, no.
294 (December 2002), pp. 1140-42, and Tim Murray,
Australian Journal of Anthropology, vol. 14, no. 2
(August 2003), pp. 265-6. Edward W. Said praises Abu El-Haj's
work in ‘Memory, inequality and power: Palestine and the
universality of human rights', Alif: Journal of
Comparative Poetics, no. 24 (2004), pp. 15-33.
18.
Sandra Scham, ‘A fight over sacred turf',
Archaeology, vol. 54, no. 6 (November/December
2001), pp. 62-8; Sandra Scham, ‘High place: symbolism
and monumentality on Mount Moriah, Jerusalem',
Antiquity, vol. 78, no. 301 (September 2004), pp.
657-9. For accusations of the Islamic authorities at the
Temple Mount destroying antiquities with bulldozers, see
Kristin M. Romey, ‘Jerusalem's Temple Mount flap',
Archaeology, vol. 53, no. 2 (March/April 2000), p.
20; Elizabeth J. Himmelfarb, ‘Supervision at Temple
Mount', Archaeology, vol. 53, no. 5
(September/October 2000), p. 19.
19.
Graeme Barker (ed.), Companion Encyclopedia of
Archaeology (2 vols., London: Routledge, 1999),
vol. I, p. 160.
20.
Gavin Lucas, Critical Approaches to Fieldwork:
Contemporary and Historical Archaeological Practice
(London: Routledge, 2001), p. 52.
21.
‘Archaeologist David Usshiskin responds to El Haj
accusations', Solomonia Blog, 5 December 2006:
http://www.solomonia.com/blog/archives/009649.shtml.
22.
Abu El-Haj, Facts on the Ground, pp. 2, 4