Volcanic eruption triggered biblical parting of Red Sea
 The greatest story ever told has acquired a Hollywood twist. James
Cameron, the director of Titanic, is the executive producer of a new
documentary that claims to have uncovered fresh evidence confirming one
of the most dramatic episodes in the Old Testament - the parting of the
Red Sea and the Jewish exodus from Egypt.
In The Exodus Decoded, a 90-minute documentary that will be shown in
America this month, Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici, the Canadian film
producers, claim a volcanic eruption on the Greek archipelago of
Santorini triggered a chain of natural catastrophes recorded in the
Bible as the 10 plagues that God visited upon Egypt as punishment for
enslaving the Jews.
Cameron believes the parting of the Red Sea may have been a tsunami
that destroyed the pharaoh's army as it pursued the escaping Jews. The
documentary claims the episode occurred not at the Red Sea but at the
smaller Sea of Reeds, a marshy area at the northern end of the Gulf of
Suez.
An underwater earthquake may have released poisonous gases that
turned the waters red.
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Simcha Jacobovici |
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James Cameron |
Jacobovici said "the common wisdom is there isn't a single piece of
archaeological evidence backing up the biblical story of the exodus".
Jewish scholars have reluctantly concurred that an episode central to
their faith - commemorated each year at Passover - may never have taken
place.
Yet Cameron and Jacobovici claim to have unearthed more than a dozen
archaeological relics that suggest the exodus took place three centuries
earlier than biblical scholars estimate. By reinterpreting artwork at
museums in Luxor, Cairo, Athens and elsewhere, Jacobovici dates the
exodus to around 1500 BC.
That was about the time when some geologists believe the Santorini
volcano, 400 miles north of Egypt, erupted in the eastern Mediterranean.
Scientists and historians have long speculated that the 10 "plagues"
suffered by Egypt might have been linked in a "domino theory" of natural
causes.
The documentary's website argues that a series of earthquakes may
have "destabilised the entire Nile Delta system and resulted in part of
the delta sliding off the African continental shelf". This would have
raised the level of land around the Sea of Reeds, believed to have been
saltwater swamps around El Balah, the now extinct lake.
"In other words, the sea parted," the website says. "Water would have
cascaded from higher ground to lower ground . . . creating dry land on
which the Israelites could cross. This event would also have caused an
enormous 'backsplash' of water, a veritable tsunami. If the waves went a
mere seven miles inland they would have engulfed the Egyptian army."
The Exodus Decoded producers believe the waters were turned red by
chemicals released by underwater tremors. Something similar happened to
the lakes in Cameroon in 1986. If the waters were poisoned, amphibians
would hop ashore, producing the biblical plague of frogs. When the frogs
died, insects would have bred on their bodies leading to plagues of
locusts, fleas and lice.
They in turn would have spread disease to humans, the plague of
boils, and animals, the plague of dying livestock. They would also have
threatened crops, forcing the Egyptians to store grain which might have
then turned mouldy. Contaminated food might account for the plague of
deaths among first-born Egyptian males. Weather conditions spawned by
the eruption might also have caused the plagues of hailstorms and
darkness.
"It's individual pieces that start to form a compelling pattern,"
said Cameron.
(Pakistan Christian Post)
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