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New Integrated Knowledge based approachs to the protection of cultural heritage from Earthquake-induced Risk
Projects


Modi'in
Umm el-‘Umdan, Ancient Modiʽin
Conservation and Development of the Village and the Synagogue Remains
Implemented by: Arch. Yaara Shaltiel
Arch. Michal Ratner
Landscape Arch. Ido Rosental
Arch. Raz Efron
Eng. Yaacov Schefer
Tsagai Asma'in
Aliza Van Zaiden
Amit Rosenblum

 
Remains of the Jewish village called Umm el-‘Umdan are located in the southwestern part of Modi‘in, next to Ha-Hashmona'im Boulevard, leading to the southern entrance of the city. The site was exposed in 2000–2001 during a salvage excavation conducted in the wake of plans to build a road. Upon discovery of the remains of the rural settlement and the synagogue in its midst, it was decided to divert the course of the road to the south in order to display the ancient remains to the public.
 
The ancient settlement dates to the pre–Hasmonean Hellenistic period, from the second century BCE, and it existed continuously until the time of the Bar Kokhba rebellion in the second century CE. During the Byzantine period the center of the settlement shifted north and the area where the Jewish village was located was covered with dirt and converted to farmland.
 
Clusters of dwellings surrounded by alleys (insulae), a public compound that included a synagogue entered by way of a broad courtyard, and a ritual bath (miqwe) were among the antiquities uncovered in the area of the ancient settlement. Ancient agricultural installations such as wine presses, a columbarium, farming terraces and dams were identified outside the village. A road several hundred meters long passed through the settlement and continued beyond it to the east and west. The excavators, Alexander Onn and Shlomit Wexler-Bdolah, proposed identifying the place with ancient Modiʽin.
 
In 2010, we began planning the conservation and development of the site with the support of the Milestones Program of the Heritage Division in the Prime Minister's Office.
 
We were presented us with a serious dilemma when it came to planning the conservation of the remains of the Jewish village. The site represents important processes in the historical development of the Jewish people, yet despite its great significance many of its remains are meager. The walls were preserved to a height of one or two courses, and they represent rural construction that is both simple and modest. While magnificent sites dating to the same period have been exposed elsewhere in the country, no monumental construction was found here, no impressive mosaics were discovered nor were there any frescoes. That being the case we were asked the question: How can the significance of the place be conveyed to the public when the physical artifacts are scant and embody plain and rudimentary construction?
 
Upon examining the cultural importance of the site we realized that the paucity of material is not a hindrance but rather an opportunity. An opportunity in a place that is not monumental – a place that represents a typical simple and modest settlement, whose values are in the social and religious content that developed in it and not in its magnificence. An opportunity to observe a time when important processes in formulating Jewish identity occurred: the Great Revolt, the destruction of the Temple, the failed Bar Kokhba rebellion, followed by the need to continue the existence of the Jewish people and the Jewish religion despite the many restrictions that nearly brought it down.
 
Since the site was excavated and published, leading researchers have discussed the cultural importance of the remains, including its excavators A. Onn and S. Wexler-Bdolah, as well as other researchers such as Israel Levine, Ehud Netzer and David Amit.
According to the Theodotus inscription discovered in excavations in the City of David in 1913, the synagogue was used “…for reading the Torah and teaching of the commandments, and the guest-chamber and the rooms and the water installation for lodging for those needing them from abroad…”. Thus the inscription shows the community significance of the structure that operated there during the Second Temple in Jerusalem.
 
Levine brings other historical sources from the Mishnah, the writings of Josephus and from the New Testament, which reinforce the words of Theodotus. The synagogue was used by the community for all its needs: religious, such as reading the Torah together, studying and blowing the shofar, for various public hearings and for accommodating guests. Ehud Netzer, followed by David Amit, addressed the architectural characteristics of synagogues from the time of the Second Temple, which included a hall surrounded by benches and a row of columns between the central space which suggests a basilica structure. Both researchers agree that the synagogues during this period did not face Jerusalem. This reinforces the fact that they were not used for prayer. Amit considers the location of the synagogue an important characteristic in its identification – the synagogue is situated in the center of the settlement and there is a wide courtyard in front of it.
 
The synagogue in Modiʽin was damaged during the Great Revolt and was hastily rehabilitated, making secondary use of existing construction materials, after the destruction of the Temple. The synagogue functioned until the Bar Kokhba uprising. The story of the synagogue embodies the transition of worship and ritual to the synagogues, as is the case today.
 
At the end of the excavations in 2001 initial conservation work was conducted there and part of the site was fenced off and locked. Because the place was not prepared for visitors it was difficult to understand the contexts of the finds, and it soon became covered again with vegetation because it was not maintained.
 
For the most part, the meagerness of the remains necessitated extensive development. The ancient dirt road that crossed the settlement and was the main street was exposed and rehabilitated. In order to emphasize the transition from the agricultural area to the village proper, we erected stone fences that reconstruct an ancient agricultural landscape in which foresters of the Jewish National Fund planted orchard trees typical of the region. We mixed fruit trees with shade trees so as to entice the public to sit in the shade and taste the fruit. To differentiate between the fences we set up and the ancient fences, we incorporated castings in the new construction that were stamped with the date it was built. Wine presses and installations that were exposed along the road are a reflection of the agricultural activity that took place there. The wine presses were conserved and a sign was posted next to them with a graphic illustrating how the grapes were treaded and turned into wine.
 
Most of the residential building remains that were exposed are currently underground. In order to allow the public to visit them many costly safety arrangements need to be developed. Therefore, at this stage of the site development the dwelling remains have been denoted with signage but access to them is blocked.
 
On the basis of our experience at many other sites, we learned that the site will be taken care of, maintained and conserved over time only if there is a high level of awareness about heritage conservation, great interest on the part of the local authority responsible for it, and an involved community that believes the site is important. The Modiʽin municipality, like the Israel Antiquities Authority, viewed the rehabilitation of the remains of the ancient settlement, especially those of the synagogue, as an opportunity to reinforce the bonds between the residents of the modern community of Modiʽin with the community values of ancient Modiʽin that existed there nearly 2,000 years ago. Fourth graders from nearby Ra‘im and Alonim elementary schools participated in the development and conservation of the site. They learned about the site, visited it, took part in the excavation of the site and awarded Torah scrolls to first graders in a ceremony that took place there.
 
Today the synagogue is used by the residents of Modiʽin for a variety of events: for kaballat Shabbat (welcoming the Shabbat), lighting Hanukkah candles, bar mitzvahs and as mentioned distributing torah scrolls to first graders. We considered it important that the public convene in the synagogue itself, seated around the perimeter of the hall in the same way as the community sat there during the Second Temple period. The soil balks north of the synagogue, which were created in the archaeological excavation, were stabilized as two earthen steps so that mats can be spread or chairs placed on them during events where there are many participants.
 
In order to extend the time for possible activity at the site solar powered lighting was installed there which saves electricity, does not require an underground infrastructure and does not damage the archaeology.
 
The project was established with the cooperation and great commitment on the part of the municipality of Modiʽin, the Milestones program of the Heritage Department in the Prime Minister's Office, the Jewish National Fund and the Israel Antiquities Authority. All these joined together to create a connection between the residents of Modiʽin and the settlement’s archaeological heritage.
 
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Planners: Arch. Ya‘ara Shaltiel, Arch. Michal Ratner, Landscape Arch. Ido Rosental.
Conservation Engineer: Jacob Schefer.
Conservators: teams headed by Tsagai Asma'in, Aliza van Zaiden and Amit Rosenblum.
 
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August 2015
 
 
 
 
 
 


To view the figures, click on the figure caption
1. Conservation work in the synagogue, 2014.

2. The entrance to the site on the ancient road, Hanukkah 2014.

3. Detail: a marking used to indicate reconstructed fences.

4. The synagogue prior to the work, 2012.

5. General view upon completion of the work.


Additional Projects
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 Shade Planning in the Ancient Synagogue -


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