Word: jerichos
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...with or deal with," says Jordan's Education Minister Auni Abdel Hadi. Admirers call him another Churchill; others, like one State Department official, consider him "the most dangerous man in the Middle East." "Ben-Gurion is not a full man," says Sheik Farouki, leader of Arab refugees in Jericho. "He is a poet . . . not a man of facts. He wanted to build a new nation by raiding cemeteries and making a people from the bones of history." Says Foreign Minister Sharett: "People call Ben-Gurion an extremist. He is not. He is a radical who advocates all his policies...
Stoned to Death. In Jericho, 20,000 Arab refugees from Israel poured out of their dismally squalid camps and rampaged through a model-farm school, established for their benefit by U.S. and Middle Eastern philanthropists, breaking windows, smashing incubators, and killing or stealing 10,000 chickens and 3,000 turkeys. Next the mob burned down a warehouse containing $60,000 worth of clothing which an American Mennonite mission had planned to distribute to the refugees as gifts. In the little town of Bethlehem, usually host to thousands of Christian pilgrims at this season, another mob stormed a police station; police...
...remarkable thing about these neolithic people is that they lived in a walled town at a time-more than 7,000 years ago-when man was only just beginning to build any kind of settlement. The reason for the wall is probably the character of Jericho's site. A copious spring of fresh water (Elisha's fountain in the Bible) gushes out of the hillside and makes possible the irrigation of a fertile, subtropical plain beside the Dead Sea. The people of the first Jericho must have developed irrigation and built their prosperity upon it. This settlement...
...archaeologists do not know how long the first Jerichans prospered in their little oasis. It was probably not for long-Jericho lies on a natural roadway exposed to the comings and goings of fierce invaders. Above the remains of the first city many others lie in layers, and they were inhabited by a long series of different cultures. Most of them came out of the desert wilderness. They attacked Jerich, destroyed it, and built it up again...
About 2200 B.C. came the Semitic Amorites, who held Jericho until the arrival of the children of Israel. Director Kenyon has not found Joshua's wall (or its shouted-down fragments), but she does not care. She is not interested, she says, in "modern" history...