Sharon
Schaveet, producer and expert on film production
in Israel, talks about the Dead Sea Scrolls.
“I have investigated the subject of the
Dead Sea Scrolls for many films. This topic
is intriguing and has infinite potential to
be transferred onto film. The discovery of the
scrolls has taught us much and yet we sense
that there are many secrets still to be revealed.”
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Biblical
Productions - filming in Israel |
“During my thorough research for various productions,
I interviewed many scholars and experts who passed on
their thoughts and ideas about the scrolls. This article
will focus on their different perspectives and give
you some suggestions for filming.”
The Desert – a Biblical Safe Haven
Many biblical dramas unfolded in the desert, making
it a favorite setting for those filming on location
in Israel. In the Judean wilderness, a stark,
barren place, with deep wadis (ridges) and dramatic
views, the inhabitants of ancient Jerusalem fled from
advancing armies. They sought safety for themselves
and their possessions, finding cover in the mountain
caves.
According to the New Testament, John the Baptist
lived here, surviving on a diet of wild honey and
locusts. Jesus too reportedly found solitude in the
silence of Judean Mountains - drawing strength to
deny the temptations of the devil.
Today the Judean desert draws those seeking something
other than peace and solitude - archaeologists who
excavate the hillside caves, searching for relics
of the past. Half a century ago, one of the greatest
archaeological discoveries was found here, buried
beneath the sands of time. A treasure that is as much
a mystery today, as when it was discovered sixty years
ago, the Dead Sea Scrolls. These ancient relics offer
an intriguing glimpse into the past and provide an
interesting topic to film in Israel.
A Timeless Treasure Unearthed
Although commencing in biblical times, the story
of these scrolls continues to unfold today. The most
recent episode in this biblical blockbuster started
with the humblest of beginnings. In the early hours
of the dawn, one spring day in 1947, a Bedouin shepherd
was watching over his grazing herd. Muhammad al Hemid
- nicknamed the Wolf - spotted a crevice his sheep
could easily fall into. Before blocking it up, he
idly threw in a rock - and was stunned by the sound
of a breaking pot.
Tearing away the rocks to enlarge the entrance, Muhammad
dragged himself into the darkness. Eagerly scouring
the floor for fabulous jewels or golden coins and
still getting used to the dark, he found several pots,
still intact. Muhammad noticed that there was something
rolled up inside the pots. Removing the bundles, excited
to find out what they held inside, he rushed outside
- only to look down in disappointment at rolls of
old and rotting leather.
Production Note: The discovery
of the scrolls can be recreated using pot and scroll
props.
Identifying the Texts
Cursing his luck and stuffing the bundles into his
shirt, Muhammad continued on his way to Bethlehem.
Encouraged by friends he met at the market, Muhammad
told his tale to a local antiques dealer, Khalil Eskandor
Shahin - known as Kando. Kando was the first to suggest
that the scrolls might be ancient parchments and perhaps
worth something after all.
Kando sent Muhammad back to search the cave again
while he himself went up to Jerusalem. Here at St.
Mark’s Monastery, Kando sold the scrolls to
the Bishop of the Syrian Orthodox Church, Mar Athenasius
Samuel.
Mar Samuel fervently hoped he’d purchased early
Christian texts, but wherever he went he was met with
skepticism and suspicion - even at Jerusalem’s
prestigious Ecole Biblique, the French Biblical and
Archaeological School.
Production Note: The Ecole
Biblique Library is great place to conduct interviews
whilst filming in Jerusalem.
Meanwhile, Muhammad returned from the desert with
more scrolls, which he later sold to a second Bethlehem
dealer - for 7 Palestinian Pounds - to Hebrew University
professor, Elazar Sukenik. Was shown a tiny piece
of parchment across the barbed- wire of a divided
Jerusalem; what he saw sent shivers down his spine.
Sukenik immediately confirmed it as part of an original
text from the time of the Second Temple, over 2,000
years ago. To buy them, he was told he must go to
Bethlehem.
Production Note: Footage
of Bethlehem at this time, obtained from our archives
could be used here.
The Mystery Unravels
Although just a bus ride away, a journey to Bethlehem
was unthinkable. After years of British rule, Palestine
was about to be partitioned between Arabs and Jews.
Snipers were attacking vehicles on the roads every
day. Despite the obvious dangers and ignoring the
warnings of his son Yigal - head of intelligence in
Israel’s fledgling army - on November 29, 1947
Sukenik boarded an Arab bus disguised as a worker.
Safely completing the round-trip, Sukenik returned
to Jerusalem with the scrolls wrapped in newspaper.
On his way home that evening, riots broke out across
the city.
Production Note: Old footage
of the riots can be used here.
With the shooting audible outside, Sukenik opened
the ancient manuscripts in his study and was transported
into another world. He read the familiar words of
the Prophet Isaiah and realized that he was handling
the oldest copy of a Bible book ever seen - written
when Rome ruled the ancient world 2000 years ago.
The second scroll Sukenik opened told a strange tale
of a final apocalyptic war where the ‘Sons of
Light’ shatter the power of the ‘Sons
of Darkness’ forever.
Production Note: This ‘War
Scroll’ is located in the Shrine of the Book
a permit is required in order to film inside.
The third scroll contained a set of twenty-five thanksgiving
hymns - like the Biblical psalms but in a language
all their own.
The Experts Step In
As Sukenik wondered about the identity of the authors
of these texts, on the other side of the city, Mar
Samuel had finally found someone willing to verify
the authenticity of his texts. Scholars at East Jerusalem’s
American School of Oriental Research (ASOR) - photographed
and published Mar Samuel’s scrolls – which
were a copy of the book of Isaiah. He also had a second
scroll which detailed the life and practices of a
sect that calls itself the ‘Community’,
in Hebrew the “yahad”.
Now certain of their antiquity, Mar Samuel promptly
left for the United States with his scrolls. At ASOR,
not at all sure of what they had stumbled upon, the
scholars sent copies of their photographs to leading
US scholar, William F. Albright at Johns Hopkins University.
A pioneer of Middle-East archaeological study, Albright
was among the first to pronounce the scrolls the work
of a little known Jewish sect, the Essenes.
Life During the Time of the Scrolls
First century Palestine saw the Jews living under
the domination of the mighty Roman Empire. Within
the wider Jewish community there were four main groups.
a) The Sadducees were aristocrats, Temple priests
who demanded adherence to Jewish Law in religious
observation but promoted political compromise with
Rome. Adopting foreign ways, they were unpopular within
general Jewish society.
b) The Pharisees were interpreters of both oral and
written law, a popular movement of the time that lay
the foundations for the rabbinic Judaism that lives
on today.
c) The Zealots were extreme nationalists who sought
to oust the foreign power and their puppet rulers.
They looked back two centuries to the revolt that
drove the Greeks out of the Land of Israel and rededicated
the Temple to the worship of the true Jewish God.
These Zealots would soon spark a war with Rome that
would leave Jerusalem and the Temple destroyed forever.
d) Finally there was a group called the Essenes.
The Essenes
The scroll containing the ‘Manual of Discipline’,
now generally known as the ‘Community Rule’,
gives a detailed description of the life of this mysterious
sect. The community was pious and lived by strict
rules, for example:
- There was a three year initiation period for anyone
wishing to join their ascetic lifestyle of purity
and devotion to G-d.
- Members shared wealth and property
- Members shared a ritual communal meal conducted
by a priest
- According to the ‘Hymns’ scroll they
believed that they shared their homes with the angels
of the host.
The obvious similarities to early Christians fired
the world’s imagination and led to a flood of
theories about the nature of the scrolls - perhaps
here were the very origins of Christianity; perhaps
even Jesus himself was an Essene.
Decades later the scrolls were still being studied
amidst an air of controversy. Some felt the slow progress
and continuing delay in publication was a conspiracy
by the Vatican. They alleged that access to the material
was being limited to only a few select Catholic scholars
in an attempt to suppress any connection between the
scrolls and Jesus. They claim the Vatican was keen
to distance Christianity from the Essenes as it could
undermine the uniqueness of Jesus. However, the connection
between Jesus and the sect, as well as any conspiracy
were always denied by conservative scroll scholars.
The Hunt Intensifies
Before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the
world had pitifully few references about the ancient
Essene sect. The longest - a five page description
by historian of antiquity Josephus Flavius - pictures
a white clothed, celibate, wealth-sharing brotherhood,
dedicated to God’s Law, practicing healing and
prophecy. Josephus even details the long process of
acceptance into the ranks of the sect, details that
mirror the words of the scroll itself.
“He shall admit into the Covenant of Grace
all those who have freely devoted themselves to the
observance of G-d’s precepts, that they maybe
joined to the counsel of G-d and may live perfectly
before Him in accordance with all that has been revealed…”
Echoing through the passages of time, these words
resonated in the ears of French Catholic priest, Father
Roland De Vaux. A monk of the Dominican monastic order
(and one of Palestine’s most respected archaeologists),
De Vaux was a leading scholar at the Ecole Biblique
- the same French School of Biblical Archaeology that
had dismissed Mar Samuel’s scrolls as fakes
only months before.
With the discovery of the scrolls, Father De Vaux
and British archaeologist, G. Lankester Harding -
head of Jordan’s Antiquities Department - hastily
organized a team of archaeologists to investigate
the Dead Sea caves. To their surprise they found the
usually deserted wilderness full of Bedouin treasure
seekers - furiously digging up every cave they could
find. De Vaux and Harding’s professional team
lost no time in commencing their own excavations.
A digging frenzy developed, with a whole series of
excavations taking place. Bedouins, chasing the thrill
of the hunt and the lure of a reward, worked close
to experienced archaeologists. A healthy air of competition
emerged between them. You’d have expected the
archaeologists to have the strongest sense of where
to look but the local knowledge and intuition lead
to the Bedouins making the majority of discoveries.
In one site alone, Cave 4, Bedouin treasure seekers
unearthed about 15,000 fragments - the remains of
at least 500 scrolls. Scroll hunting was fast becoming
big business for the Bedouins.
Whilst at the caves, De Vaux and Harding briefly
visited Khirbet Qumran – an ancient ruin on
a small plateau less than a 100 meters from Cave 4.
Long believed to be the remains of a Roman fort from
the 3rd or 4th century AD, De Vaux and Harding dismissed
the site as completely unconnected to the scrolls.
The flood of material from the caves continued to
pour into the office of Jordan’s Antiquities
Department, housed in East Jerusalem’s Rockefeller
Museum. Carried in every conceivable container, many
were brought in the cigarette packs of the period
[including cigarette boxes].
At first Harding paid for each fragment as a separate
find, which tragically lead to some Bedouins breaking
up many parchments to maximize their income. Eventually
Harding got wise to the trick and began paying a standard
price per square inch of parchment.
Putting the Pieces Together
With the authorities at a loss as to what to do with
all the material, De Vaux was asked to assemble a
team of experts to reconstruct and publish the fragments.
The eight man team of mainly Catholic scholars worked
in a room at the Rockefeller Museum, which they named
‘The Scrollery’. Here the team began the
mammoth task of reconstructing the scrolls. Slowly
assembling the pieces together needed a scrupulous
eye for detail. Gradually they witnessed the pages
slowly beginning to take shape; the words so carefully
recorded and stored for centuries were about to be
revealed. The jigsaw puzzle was nearing completion
and an air of excitement pervaded.
While this tight-knit group worked on the fragments
in Jerusalem, scholars world-wide were excitedly studying
the complete scrolls published by ASOR and Sukenik.
Interest in the Essenes intensified and the words
of the first century Roman Geographer, Pliney the
Elder were recalled;
“On the western shore of the Dead Sea are settled
the Essenes. . .a lonely people, the most extraordinary
in the world, living without women, without love and
without money, having only palm trees for company.”
These few words were the only clue to the geographic
location of the Essene community, and soon growing
demand forced De Vaux to re-look at the ruins of Khirbet
Qumaran
Returning to the desert, where he was to spend much
of the next four years, De Vaux almost immediately
found scroll-jars identical to those found in the
caves.
Khirbet Qumaran
It was soon clear that Qumran was no temporary Roman
camp, but a well established settlement, inhabited
between mid-second century BCE and 68 CE. It was set
within a walled enclosure and had a large watchtower
guarding the main entrance. The excavations unearthed
over 30 buildings, some of which supported second
story wooden rooms.
Armed with the sect’s own words as a guide
to the settlement, De Vaux set out to identify the
use of the site’s structures.
Around a main block there was a mill with a baking
oven, a pottery with two kilns, various workshops
and storerooms. Outside the complex there was a cemetery
with over a thousand graves.
From the rubble of a collapsed second story room
in the heart of the complex, a 5-meter long mud-brick
and plaster object was pieced together. Despite the
odd and unstable shape, De Vaux labeled it a table,
the very one where the sectarians sat copying the
scrolls. When excavations unearthed three inkwells
De Vaux emphatically labeled the room, the Scriptorium
- a name it still carries today.
On one side of the main block was the kitchen, on
the other, a dining hall - with a pantry holding over
1,000 dishes, bowls, beakers and jugs in a small ante-chamber.
It was here, De Vaux surmised, that the community
held its ritual meals.
“When they shall gather for the common table.
. .the Priest. . . shall bless the first-fruits of
bread and wine, and shall be first to extend his hand
over the bread. Thereafter the Messiah of Israel shall
extend his hand over the bread, and all the congregation
of the Community shall utter a blessing”
As the largest room at Qumran, De Vaux was in no
doubt that this dining room also doubled up as the
assembly hall where members gathered annually to renew
their oath to the Community of Everlasting Covenant.
Gathering evidence from the texts of the scrolls,
the archaeology of the site and the historians descriptions
of the sect, De Vaux’s ideas have become so
entrenched in scroll studies that they now known as
the consensus view.
Still regarded by many scholars as the only logical
association, De Vaux saw the scrolls as describing
a monastic community living at Qumran in isolation
from the turmoil of the times, far removed for the
rise of Christianity. It was these monks of Qumran
who composed, copied and finally deposited the scrolls
in the nearby caves - and they were, beyond doubt,
the peace-loving Essenses named by the scholars of
old.
But, despite its name, De Vaux’s consensus
view was never universally accepted, having bitter
critics both during his lifetime and after his death
in 1971. One of his most vocal opponents over the
last twenty years has been Professor Golb of the University
of Chicago.
An Alternative View
Where De Vaux saw monks copying religious texts,
Golb questioned how three inkwells could seriously
be considered evidence of a community producing scrolls
in literally hundreds of different handwriting styles.
In his view, any group would have needed at least
one scribe to manage its affairs and one scribe could
easily have used three inkwells in one lifetime. He
did not feel adequate tools had been discovered to
link the site to the writing of the scrolls.
Another anomaly related to the writing table. De
Vaux’s himself admitted that scribes did not
actually begin writing at tables for another two hundred
years – during this period they would have sat
cross-legged, writing on material stretched between
their knees.
It is also thought strange that in all the years
of painstaking excavations, not one fragment of parchment
was ever been uncovered, either in the so-called scriptorium,
or in the whole of Qumran settlement. Golb and others
see these as just a few of the anomolies indicating
that perhaps Father De Vaux built his interpretation
upon assumptions and preconceptions.
Golb questioned why De Vaux and his followers had
never explained what the Essenes were doing in an
obviously fortified settlement immediately prior to
the greatest revolt ever organized against the might
of the Roman Empire.
It is Golb’s passionately held conclusion that
the settlement of Qumran had nothing to do with the
writing of the texts and that the scrolls were brought
to the desert for safety - mainly from Jerusalem -
a time when the war with Rome raged throughout the
land.
Others believe that the sectarians themselves played
a major part in that war with Rome - war that caused
the final destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple
and saw the end of Jewish independence in Palestine
for the next 2000 years.
Filming Inspiration
This remarkable story enthralls and excites from
beginning to end. It can be filmed at a variety of
locations in Israel; biblical sites, stunning desert
views and atmospheric caves. It is also suited to
dramatic reconstruction and expert interviews
Biblical Productions can organize your access to
theologians, scholars and experts. We can also locate
specific material from our archives to meet the needs
of your production and, crucially, organize your access
to filming sites in Israel. The caves of Qumaran,
for example, cannot be accessed without the appropriate
permit.
Already established as logistical and industry experts,
we also provide specialist services to clients, including
an ever-growing data bank filled with a range of experts
and historical figures. We work with you to determine
who would interview best – in terms of their
connection to your story, as well as their presentation
skills.
Filming in Israel
Biblical Productions is a leading company in the field
of production services, based in Israel. We cover
all areas of film and television production, including
documentaries, feature films, commercials, music videos
and promotional films.
Biblical Productions guides you during your shoot
in Israel - from the pre-production planning to the
post-production wrap. We arrange professional crews,
fixers, permits, HD equipment rental, interviews,
location scouting and more.
Biblical Productions also boasts a large collection
of high-quality archival footage, making it a one-stop
shop for all your production services in Israel. Please
view our client list
‘Biblical Productions: The number once choice
for production services in Israel.'

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