http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article1984457.ece

How toilet habits killed off Dead Sea Scrolls sect 
By Andrew Gumbel 
Published: 15 November 2006 
Sometimes, the best survival instincts can be deadly. According to intriguing 
new research by an international team of Biblical scholars, the religious sect 
associated with the Dead Sea Scrolls may have been done in by its own 
scrupulous toilet habits. 

The Essenes, who established an ascetic community at Qumran on the 
north-western shores of the Dead Sea, rejected the common Bedouin practice of 
relieving themselves in the open. Instead, they assigned a dumping ground about 
half a mile from their community and buried their waste there, believing the 
practice to be more hygienic.

All that effort, though, appears to have been counterproductive. The parasites 
and harmful bacteria associated with human waste would have been quickly killed 
off by the desert sun had they remained above ground. Once buried, they could 
survive and thrive, creating a toxic environment that infected members of the 
Essene sect as they walked to and from their toilet area. The parasites almost 
certainly bred in a special cistern used in religious cleansing ceremonies, 
providing a compelling reason for the early deaths of many Essenes.

"Some people might laugh, but it is terribly sad," one of the scholars, James 
Tabor of the University of North Carolina, told the Los Angeles Times. "They 
were so dedicated and had such a strenuous lifestyle, but they were probably 
lowering their life expectancy and ruining their health in an effort to do what 
is right." The toilet research conducted by Dr Tabor and his colleagues 
stemmed, curiously, from a much broader controversy over the authorship of the 
Dead Sea Scrolls. Several scholars have questioned whether the Essenes really 
wrote them, or even if they ever established a community at Qumran.

Dr Tabor and Joseph Zias of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem took their cue 
from passages in the Scrolls specifying rules for toilet hygiene. They found an 
area of soft ground north-west of Qumran, took soil samples and sent them to a 
French colleague for analysis. The colleague, Stephnie Harter-Lailheugue, found 
preserved eggs and other remnants of roundworms, tapeworms, whipworms and 
pinworms. Samples taken from surrounding areas were, by contrast, entirely 
barren.

The toilet area is now an important piece of evidence linking the Qumran site 
to the Scrolls and thus belies recent theories that, for example, the Scrolls 
were hidden in the caves at Qumran by Jews from Jerusalem fleeing the 
oppression of Roman occupation.

The toilet also provides a compelling explanation for earlier research into the 
Qumran cemetery, which established that barely one in 20 bodies buried there 
had survived to the age of 40. Cemeteries from the same period excavated near 
Jericho have shown that, more typically, half the population would survive 
beyond 40.

"The graveyard at Qumran is the unhealthiest group I have ever studied in over 
30 years," Dr Zias told the Times.

The Dead Sea Scrolls have been a constant source of fascination since their 
chance discovery by Bedouin tribesmen in 1947. They provide a rare, if not 
unique, insight into life and customs around the time of Jesus's life and 
death. They are also the only Biblical-era documents known to have been written 
before AD100. In other words, they predate the Gospels.

Just about every aspect of the scrolls has been subject to theorising. While 
religious scholars have agonised over the question of whether, say, the Scrolls 
were written by the Essenes themselves or by an Essene splinter group, 
conspiracy theorists have posited that the Scrolls were somehow fabricated or 
planted by extra-terrestrials.

One intriguing, but almost entirely unsupported, theory suggests the Catholic 
Church deliberately suppressed publication of the Scrolls to protect its image 
of Jesus and his life. 

Sometimes, the best survival instincts can be deadly. According to intriguing 
new research by an international team of Biblical scholars, the religious sect 
associated with the Dead Sea Scrolls may have been done in by its own 
scrupulous toilet habits. 

The Essenes, who established an ascetic community at Qumran on the 
north-western shores of the Dead Sea, rejected the common Bedouin practice of 
relieving themselves in the open. Instead, they assigned a dumping ground about 
half a mile from their community and buried their waste there, believing the 
practice to be more hygienic.

All that effort, though, appears to have been counterproductive. The parasites 
and harmful bacteria associated with human waste would have been quickly killed 
off by the desert sun had they remained above ground. Once buried, they could 
survive and thrive, creating a toxic environment that infected members of the 
Essene sect as they walked to and from their toilet area. The parasites almost 
certainly bred in a special cistern used in religious cleansing ceremonies, 
providing a compelling reason for the early deaths of many Essenes.

"Some people might laugh, but it is terribly sad," one of the scholars, James 
Tabor of the University of North Carolina, told the Los Angeles Times. "They 
were so dedicated and had such a strenuous lifestyle, but they were probably 
lowering their life expectancy and ruining their health in an effort to do what 
is right." The toilet research conducted by Dr Tabor and his colleagues 
stemmed, curiously, from a much broader controversy over the authorship of the 
Dead Sea Scrolls. Several scholars have questioned whether the Essenes really 
wrote them, or even if they ever established a community at Qumran.

Dr Tabor and Joseph Zias of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem took their cue 
from passages in the Scrolls specifying rules for toilet hygiene. They found an 
area of soft ground north-west of Qumran, took soil samples and sent them to a 
French colleague for analysis. The colleague, Stephnie Harter-Lailheugue, found 
preserved eggs and other remnants of roundworms, tapeworms, whipworms and 
pinworms. Samples taken from surrounding areas were, by contrast, entirely 
barren.

The toilet area is now an important piece of evidence linking the Qumran site 
to the Scrolls and thus belies recent theories that, for example, the Scrolls 
were hidden in the caves at Qumran by Jews from Jerusalem fleeing the 
oppression of Roman occupation.

The toilet also provides a compelling explanation for earlier research into the 
Qumran cemetery, which established that barely one in 20 bodies buried there 
had survived to the age of 40. Cemeteries from the same period excavated near 
Jericho have shown that, more typically, half the population would survive 
beyond 40.

"The graveyard at Qumran is the unhealthiest group I have ever studied in over 
30 years," Dr Zias told the Times.

The Dead Sea Scrolls have been a constant source of fascination since their 
chance discovery by Bedouin tribesmen in 1947. They provide a rare, if not 
unique, insight into life and customs around the time of Jesus's life and 
death. They are also the only Biblical-era documents known to have been written 
before AD100. In other words, they predate the Gospels.

Just about every aspect of the scrolls has been subject to theorising. While 
religious scholars have agonised over the question of whether, say, the Scrolls 
were written by the Essenes themselves or by an Essene splinter group, 
conspiracy theorists have posited that the Scrolls were somehow fabricated or 
planted by extra-terrestrials.

One intriguing, but almost entirely unsupported, theory suggests the Catholic 
Church deliberately suppressed publication of the Scrolls to protect its image 
of Jesus and his life. 


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