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Jordan wants Dead Sea Scrolls back from Israel
Published Date: January 12, 2010 

AMMAN: Jordan has complained to the United Nations in a bid to acquire the Dead 
Sea Scrolls from Israel, saying the Jewish state seized the ancient texts 
during the 1967 Six-Day war, an official said yesterday. "The kingdom has filed 
a complaint to UNESCO that the scrolls belong to Jordan," Rafea Harahsheh of 
the country's antiquities department said in a statement. "The government has 
legal documents that prove Jordan owns the scrolls." Harahsheh did not say when 
the kingdom, which signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994, filed the 
complaint to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural 
Organisation.

The scrolls, some of which are as old as the third century BC, were part of a 
display at Toronto's Royal Ontario Museum in Canada that ended on Sunday. "We 
have been trying our best to restore our stolen antiquities, including the 
scrolls. Stealing our antiquities violates international treaties and ethics," 
Harahsheh said. "Israel seized the scrolls and other antiquities from the 
Palestinian Museum, which was managed by Jordan, in east Jerusalem when it 
occupied this part of the city in 1967.

East Jerusalem was captured from Jordan during the Six-Day war and Israel later 
annexed it in a move not recognised by the international community. Jordan has 
asked Canada to seize the scrolls, invoking the 1954 Convention for the 
Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, to which the 
two countries are signatories. "So far, Canada has reservations. We are still 
studying our options," Tourism and Antiquities Minister Maha Khatib told AFP, 
without elaborating. A Canadian foreign ministry spokesman told AFP earlier 
this month that "it would not be appropriate for Canada to intervene" in 
differences between Jordan and Israel over the scrolls.

In April, top Palestinian officials called on Canadian Prime Minister Stephen 
Harper to step in to cancel the exhibition. In a letter to Harper, they argued 
that the texts were acquired illegally after Israel annexed East Jerusalem. The 
parchments have shed light on the earliest origins of Judaism and Christianity, 
and are considered to be one of the greatest archaeological finds of all time. 
Also called the Qumran manuscripts, the scrolls, attributed to the Jewish 
Essenes religious community, are of huge historical interest, especially for 
biblical scholars.

The first fragments were discovered in arid caves along the shores of the Dead 
Sea by a Bedouin shepherd in 1947. "The Bedouins sold them to a group of Syrian 
Christians. They gave the scrolls to their Orthodox bishop, who took them to 
the United States in 1948," Harahsheh said. Israel's antiquities authority has 
said Israel is the rightful custodian of the Dead Sea Scrolls. - AFP 

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