“They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews
Abstract
:1. Ginzberg’s “War with the Armenians”
Joshua’s victorious course did not end with the conquest of the land. His war with the Armenians, after Palestine was subdued, marked the climax of his heroic deeds. Among the thirty-one kings whom Joshua had slain, there was one whose son, Shobach by name, was king of Armenia. With the purpose of waging war with Joshua, he united the forty five kings of Persia and Media, and they were joined by the renowned hero Japheth. The allied kings in a letter informed Joshua of their design against him as follows: “The noble, distinguished council of the kings of Persia and Media to Joshua, peace! Thou wolf of the desert, we well know what thou didst to our kinsmen. Thou didst destroy our palaces; without pity thou didst slay young and old; our fathers thou didst mow down with the sword; and their cities thou didst turn into a desert. Know, then, that in the space of thirty days, we shall come to thee, we, the forty-five kings, each having sixty thousand warriors under him, all of them armed with bows and arrows, girt about with swords, all of us skilled in the ways of war, and with us the hero Japheth. Prepare now for the combat, and say not afterward that we took thee at unawares”.
The messenger bearing the letter arrived on the day before the Feast of Weeks. Although Joshua was greatly wrought up by the contents of the letter, he kept his counsel until after the feast, in order not to disturb the rejoicing of the people. Then, at the conclusion of the feast, he told the people of the message that had reached him, so terrifying that even he, the veteran warrior, trembled at the heralded approach of the enemy. Nevertheless, Joshua determined to accept the challenge. From the first words his reply was framed to show the heathen how little their fear possessed him whose trust was set in God. The introduction to his epistle reads as follows: “In the Name of the Lord, the God of Israel, who saps the strength of the iniquitous warrior, and slays the rebellious sinner. He breaks up the assemblies of marauding transgressors, and He gathers together in council the pious and the just scattered abroad, He the God of all gods, the Lord of all lords, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God is the Lord of war! From me, Joshua, the servant of God, and from the holy and chosen congregation to the impious nations, who pay worship to images, and prostrate themselves before idols: No peace unto you, saith my God! Know that ye acted foolishly to awaken the slumbering lion, to rouse up the lion’s whelp, to excite his wrath. I am ready to pay you your recompense. Be ye prepared to meet me, for within a week I shall be with you to slay your warriors to a man”. Joshua goes on to recite all the wonders God had done for Israel, who need fear no power on earth; and he ends his missive with the words: “If the hero Japheth is with you, we have in the midst of us the Hero of all heroes, the Highest above all the high”. The heathen were not a little alarmed at the tone of Joshua’s letter. Their terror grew when the messenger told of the exemplary discipline maintained in the Israelitish army, of the gigantic stature of Joshua, who stood five ells high, of his royal apparel, of his crown graven with the Name of God. At the end of seven days Joshua appeared with twelve thousand troops. When the mother of King Shobach who was a powerful witch, espied the host, she exercised her magic art, and enclosed the Israelitish army in seven walls. Joshua thereupon sent forth a carrier pigeon to communicate his plight to Nabiah, the king of the trans-Jordanic tribes. He urged him to hasten to his help and bring the priest Phinehas and the sacred trumpets with him. Nabiah did not tarry. Before the relief detachment arrived, his mother reported to Shobach that she beheld a star arise out of the East against which her machinations were vain. Shobach threw his mother from the wall, and he himself was soon afterward killed by Nabiah. Meantime Phinehas arrived, and, at the sound of his trumpets, the walls toppled down. A pitched battle ensued, and the heathen were annihilated.
Shulam in his appendix to his edition of Zacuto’s Yuḥasin, following a Samaritan chronicle (=Chronicon Samaritanum, ed. Juynboll, XXVI–XXXII); see also Yalkut Reubeni, Debarim (end), which follows Shulam….
2. Samuel Sulam’s “Epistle of Joshua Son of Nun”
Said Samuel: The soul of all flesh and every man with a wise heart will not know unsatiated joy when he finds a book of chronicles, for the soul rejoices and longs to read the books of the ancients, to acquire wisdom. Therefore, I saw fit to publish for the first time the Book of Yuhasim and afterwards I collected and assembled from the sheathes of all the books in gentile languages, Ishmaelites and Christians, and I assembled a book of memories, both long and short. I wanted to publish this short composition, for its purpose is to sanctify the Holy One of Jacob and his holy Torah and to increase his glory and that of he who received it from Sinai, the trusted of the house of our God, Moses our master, peace be upon him, and this I began with the help of the Almighty.
Said S[amuel] S[ulam]: I found, I saw it in the Book of Chronicles of the Kuttim, that they remembered they had seen it in one midrash of the Jews (or alternately, “in one Jewish midrash”. (אמר ש״ש מצאתי ראיתי בספר זכרוני הכותיים וזכרו שראו אותו במדרש אחד של היהודים) After Joshua’s conquest of the Land of Israel and the killing of thirty-one kings, it happened that one of them had a prince of little Armenia and his name was Shubakh. He [Shubakh] arose and assembled the kings of Persia and Medea, forty-five kings. They took with them Yefet the hero, who stirred. They placed him over a number of men and gathered an army as numerous as the sand on the seashore. They sent a letter to Joshua, and this is the wording of the letter (וזה נוסח האגרת).
3. Sulam’s “Epistle of Joshua Son of Nun” and Its Samaritan Sources
4. The Epistle of Joshua Son of Nun: From Constantinople to Yiddish Literature
Said Samuel Sulam: I found a sign in the verse “until the Lord gives rest to your brethren as well as to you, [and they also take possession of the land which the Lord your God is giving them; then you shall return to the land of your possession, and shall possess it, the land which Moses the servant of the Lord gave you beyond the Jordan toward the sunrise]” (Joshua 1:15).
The book of Yuḥasin and the chronicle of all that happened to us in days past is completed, [a tale of] miracles and wonders. May the Omnipotent One, blessed be He, do miracles and wonders for us, for good, and take us out of darkness to light. He will bring us our righteous Messiah, and redeem us soon, Amen, may we be strong and strengthened … Amen.
News: I tell here what I found in the book Orḥot Olam, which Rabbi Abraham Farissol copied and composed. He is the author of a commentary on Job. I saw fit to attach it to Sefer Yuḥasin to dress the wounds and revive the hearts of the dejected sufferers of this bitter and long exile, which, through our many sins, is 1512 years long. Before me is our holy Torah and our enemies mock us, saying that our hope is lost and we have been judged. We have no prophet, and none of us has any idea until when. “A king’s glory is in the greatness of his people, and peoples’ greatness” (Proverbs 14:28). Behold, owing to our sins we are left few where we were many, “without king or prince [without sacrifice or pillar, without ephod or teraphim (Hosea 3:4)”. Though we are pressed and cry for help, we have our brothers, our redeemers, the ten tribes….
5. 19th and 20th Century Developments
6. Concluding Comments: From Samaritan Tale to Jewish Legend
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Often referred to as Shulam and Shullam. |
2 | |
3 | See also 6: 202, n. 103. |
4 | Stenhouse (1985, pp. xxiv–xxxv) discusses the publication history of this document. See Niessen (2000) and Farber (2016, pp. 254–71). |
5 | Bloch and Pratt (1936, p. 473). Gottheil’s prominence in Jewish studies at this time has been underestimated in the current origins myth history of Judaic Studies in the United States and deserves reevaluation. As a first step, see Greenspahn (2000). |
6 | |
7 | (Hacker 2017, p. 84). On the importance of publishing as a vehicle of cultural transmission, communication and reconstruction by the Iberian exiles (Hacker 2012). |
8 | |
9 | Zacuto (1963, pp. 60–61). See the comments of Filpowski in Zacuto (1963, v.); Freimann in Zacuto (1963, xx–xxi); Deutsch and Mannheimer (1901–1906); Schatz (2019, pp. 98–99). |
10 | Zacuto (1963, p. 42), explaining Antichrist as המך דתם, “he who will afflict their religion”. See Augustine, City of God, 20.19.3. |
11 | See Sulam’s preface to the first edition, reproduced in Zacuto (1963, pp. xvi–xvii) and Shpigel (1998). |
12 | Narrated by Anderson (1989, pp. 103–5). |
13 | Ben-Zvi (1947, pp. 135–36), my translation. Joseph Hacker will discuss Sulam and his time in Egypt in a forthcoming article. He kindly shared this information with me in an email dated 11 November 2020. |
14 | |
15 | Sulam knew of a second work by Zacuto, “which is found in Damascus”, suggesting the reach of his contacts (Freimann, in Zacuto 1963, xix). |
16 | |
17 | T-S NS 188.20, published by Niessen, 2002. Benjamin Outhwaite of the Genizah Research Unit, Cambridge University Library, informs me that “if I had to guess, I’d go with our standard line that it belongs to the ‘Classical Period’ of the Genizah (based on the hand and the relative crudeness of the paper), and therefore 11–13th c., with earlier in that time rather than later being most likely: 11–12th c.?” (e-mail, 5 October 2020). |
18 | Niessen (2002, p. 232) is absolutely correct that “A desideratum for the studies of the Samaritan chronicles is a comprehensive synopsis and concordance of all extant versions…”. |
19 | This appreciation permeates Heller’s review. See especially 25.1 (Heller 1933–1934), pp. 29–52. |
20 | |
21 | Personal correspondence, 14 September 2020. |
22 | e.g., Esther 4:3: וצום ובכי ומספד; Job 4:14: פחד ורעדה; Daniel 5:6: דָּא לְדָא. See Ben-Zvi (1947, p. 138). |
23 | See, for example, Pummer (1993, p. 30). |
24 | |
25 | |
26 | On Boehm’s edition and his inclusion of citations from Farissol (Schatz and Sládek, forthcoming). On Farissol (Ruderman 1981). |
27 | |
28 | Cited from Yalqut Reuveni (1700, pp. 155b–156a); Ginzberg (1909–1938) 5:138, n. 16; 358, n. 310; 6:407, n. 56. |
29 | |
30 | |
31 | Turniansky (1985, p. 586). Many thanks to Andrea Schatz for bringing this fascinating turn to my attention. |
32 | Owing to Covid closures, I was unable to view this manuscript. |
33 | e.g., Sefer Tam ve-Yashar (1768). Fürth: Hayyim b. Hirsh; Sefer Tam ve-Yashar (1783). Sulzbach: Zekl b. Aharon. |
34 | Schorsch (2003, p. 13, n. 17). See also 206, n. 13: “Ginzberg, as I argue in my work, largely glosses over differences in favor of uniting the disparate features of Jewish (and often, non-Jewish) culture”. See in general Schorsch (2014). |
35 | |
36 | Ginzberg 1936, index, s.v. Samaritans. For the complexity of rabbinic interactions with Samaritans, see (Schick and Fine, forthcoming), and the bibliography there. |
37 | Ginzberg corresponded with Gaster and sent him the last two volumes (3–4) of Legends. See Golinkin (2014, p. 21). |
38 | Jewish Theological Seminary 2000, presents a selection of the JTS collection. |
39 | For a traditionalist statement of rabbinic attitudes, Ehrlinger (1947–2018, vol. 27, pp. 649–730). |
40 | (Kiel 1997); Elbaum (2014, pp. 72–75) and Hasan-Rokem (2014, pp. 81–82) discuss the Zionist anthological projects that were underway at the same time as Legends. On Sefer ha-Aggadah (Elbaum 1987). Eisenstein (1915), is a less noticed example of this phenomenon. On Eisenstein, see Oser (2020). |
41 | On the narrative of Legends, see Ginzberg (1909–1938, 5: pp. vii–viii); Schorsch (2003, pp. 18–41, 125–98); Hasan-Rokem (2014, pp. 79–88), who rightly describes Legends as a Jewish imaginaire (p. 88), following on Ginzberg himself, who describes “Jewish Legend” as a place “in which Jewish imagination expressed itself in regard to biblical events, persons and teachings” (5: p. viii). |
42 | See for example, Eisenstein (1920, pp. 338–39), who is clearly fascinated by Samaritans (even illustrating the Passover sacrifice with a photograph) and yet feels the need to disparage them. |
43 | On Ginzberg’s Zionism, E. Ginzberg (1966, pp. 187–213). |
44 | (Silman 1900). Many thanks to Yehuda Mirsky and David Selis for bringing this volume to my attention. |
45 | My translation. Eisenstein (1915, p. 209); Oser (2020, pp. 76–84, 93, 291–93). On American Protestantism and the Samaritans (Schwartz, forthcoming). |
46 | On the idea of Jewish “secularism” in Zionist and early Israeli culture (Barak-Erez 2007). |
47 | |
48 | |
49 | |
50 | |
51 | |
52 | |
53 | Jacobs (1914, p. 500). In a public conversation on the pages of the Monatsschrift für die Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums Heller and Gaster (1933) debate the extent of Islamic influence on Samaritanism and Judaism. Gaster asserts a minimalist position (pp. 304–5). |
54 | e.g., Ginzberg’s friend and Harvard faculty member Harry A. Wolfson, who argued that Jewish philosophy was the germinating point of western Philosophy and scholars who imagined that Roman period Jewish art and architecture was the starting point for Western artistic tradition. On Wolfson, see (Runia 1984). On Jewish architecture, see Fine (2010, pp. 16, 32–33). |
55 | On “Orientalism” in the German academy in which Ginzberg was formed as a Western scholar, Marchand (2013). Ginzberg’s elision is notable, as the scholarship of his teacher Theodor Nöldeke focused on early Islam (pp. 174–78). On this relationship, Newman (2010, pp. 183–84). Many thanks to Galit Hasan-Rokem for helping me to sharpen this point. |
56 | For a useful summary of the Jewish Emancipation project in twentieth century America, Sorkin (2019, pp. 346–53). Regarding over-focus on Christianity in the study of ancient Judaism, Fine (2020, p. 257, n. 56). |
57 | |
58 | Keren and Keren (2010), and the bibliography here. For comparison of the Jewish Legion with the ancient Israelites under Joshua, see, for example, Patterson (1922, pp. 130, 192). |
59 | Many thanks to the staff of Ben-Gurion House, Tel Aviv, for this information. |
60 | |
61 | Ben-Zvi’s manuscripts are preserved in in the collection of Yad Ben-Zvi Institute, Jerusalem. |
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Fine, S. “They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews. Religions 2021, 12, 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
Fine S. “They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews. Religions. 2021; 12(8):635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
Chicago/Turabian StyleFine, Steven. 2021. "“They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews" Religions 12, no. 8: 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635
APA StyleFine, S. (2021). “They Remembered That They Had Seen It in a Jewish Midrash”: How a Samaritan Tale Became a Legend of the Jews. Religions, 12(8), 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12080635