So we’re up to chapter 10 of Ben Hur and right above
it Mary says “the place is sanctified.” Have you ever thought about what that
is supposed to mean?
I did the first ever complete English translation of
the transcript from the 1913 Mendel Beilis trial on a charge of ritual murder,
the blood libel that falsely says Jews need children’s blood at Passover to put
in matso. That is false, but the connection to Ben Hur is about consecration of
land and buildings.
Late in the trial a government official takes the
stand. Beilis’ bosses were building a hospice on one corner of their property.
In autumn of 1910 they got the plans approved. Then this little twerp Merder
gets involved and makes them change the plans. He sees things in the plans that
look like part of a Christian church so he decides this isn’t really a dining
room, it’s a prayer house. Well, the Zaitsevs had already examined Kyiv laws on
building new Jewish prayer houses and the site fit the requirements, but they
decided to use it only as a dining hall for the doctors. But supposedly the
blood of the murder victim would be used to consecrate this ground.
Judaism does not require consecrated ground for
synagogues. There is no consecration ritual for any real estate that Jews use.
They put up mezuzot, and that’s it. The proper place to initiate Shabbat, or
hold the Passover seders, or light the Chanukiyah, is at home, not in a
synagogue. Still less do you need a consecration ritual for a place where a
woman is going to give birth.
Next, there is no “sacred ninth hour”. Sacrifices were
offered morning and evening in the Temple, according to the ritual specified in
Exodus.
The rest of the chapter is Christian stuff and I
promised I would leave that alone. Same for chapters 11, 12 and 14, but in
chapter 13 he tries to drag in Rabbi Hillel. Rabbi Hillel never got involved in
“the Christ” being born. That is a Christian phrase; it is meaningless in
Judaism. Herod would never ask such a question; Hillel would never take it up
seriously.
The phrase was unknown to Jews for at least a century
after Herod’s death; the King of the Jews after him was his grandson Agrippa,
about whom there are stories in Mishnah, Tacitus and Suetonius as well as
Josephus. In between, Augustus and his governors ruled Judea, and a bad lot
they were, too, raping the lush province to enrich themselves. At last,
patience worn out, the Jews rebelled and killed off three Roman legions before
the Second Temple was destroyed.
In the next 30 years Josephus became client of the Flavians and wrote his War of the Jews. One of the surviving copies has a forged insertion about “the Christ” which is also copied into his Antiquities. The forgery is in very bad Greek; I checked out one thing I didn’t understand with a professor of Greek at Cambridge and he said it was nonsense. Between 400 and 1453 CE, knowledge of Greek declined in Europe and was rediscovered when Christian scholars fled Constantinople ahead of the Muslim conquerors. That’s the setting for the bad forgery in Josephus.
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