Athens, the Agora and Hadrian
Our first full study day
with Avi, and my brain hurts. So much
information.
We started out at 8:00 and
walked to the nearby Athens Cathedral, where we sat on a low wall and had a
lecture from Avi on the comparative historic timelines of Greece and the Jewish
presence in Greece, starting in pre-history and going to the present day. We referred to a comprehensive handout of all
the important dates.
The location was not
random, as at the other end of the square stands a statue of Archbishop
Damaskinos who was a prominent defender of the rights and freedoms of Jews
during the German occupation of WW II. He
was one of the very first to be honored as Righteous Among the Nations at Yad
Vashem.
We then walked to the beautifully
reconstructed Greek Agora. The building
is very large by our standards! The long
hall, open to the air, held stalls and behind the doors were stores. The walls between a number of the stores have
been removed to create a museum of artifacts found on the site.
Here’s a piece of tomb
pottery dated to 1400 BCE:
Here’s a stemmed kylix
also from the same time:
And a pyxis and lid from
about 700 BCE:
On the grounds of the Agora is a wonderful Temple of Haifestus (Vulcan), the God of Fire, who was thought to protect the shopkeepers:
We then had our first
study session in a lovely corner of the garden of the Agora. The topic was “How is National Catastrophe Understood”
and we broke into three groups. My group
read from Thucydides and Sophocles for the Greek view and from Jeremiah and Ezekiel
for the Jewish view. The passages from Jeremiah were exactly those
we’ve read in Torah study in the past couple of weeks! After discussion, each group presented their
summaries to everyone, which led to much wonderful discussion.
We then split up for lunch,
and after lunch walked to Hadrian’s Arch:
Hadrian was a Roman who
conquered Greece during his reign from 117 to 138 CE, and he admired the Greek civilization
enormously. As a result, despite ruling
Greece, he allowed privilege and invested in Greece which flourished under his
aegis. Less well known is his hate for
the Jews and the genocide over which he presided. The Bar Kochba rebellion occurred during his
reign, and Hadrian had 2/3 of the entire Jewish population of the Middle East
murdered—some 600,000 people as best as we know. He renamed Judea as Syria-Palestina.
We had another study session
in a lovely park just beyond Hadrian’s Arch, and read from Pausanius and from
two Talmud passages. We then had a
vigorous discussion about how the same person can be seen as hero from one perspective
and as villain from another (we avoided comparisons to today’s USA politics). It was very challenging. I had been unaware of the enormity of this,
the first major Jewish genocide.
Tomorrow we leave Athens
for Volos. More when I can.
Thanks for this information. I had heard that "the Romans" renamed Judea "Palestina"--so that is now fleshed out by what you learned (which is more specific). I had no idea how devastating Hadrian's rule was for Judea.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous pottery, by the way!
ReplyDelete