Dr avner goren biography

Blessed. Cursed. Claimed.

In Amman, at the banks of the Jordan River between Jordan and the Israeli-occupied West Bank, people gather for Epiphany. This is a New Year’s rite for Orthodox Christian believers. The faithful come to the sacred stream to sing hymns, to be rebaptized. They also exchange shouted greetings across five yards of sliding brown water: “How is Auntie?” “Hold up the baby!” And “Tell Mariam we will call her tonight!”

These are Christian Arab families divided by the 1967 war between Israel and its Arab neighbors. A striped metal pole, almost within arm’s reach of each shoreline, juts mid-current above the water, delineating the border. Israeli soldiers in olive fatigues and Jordanian police in navy blue stand ready to halt anyone who might dare wade across it. A few days later I ford the Jordan River on a bus: Foot travel across Allenby Bridge checkpoint is strictly prohibited.

“Checkpoints. Checkpoints. Checkpoints,” Bassam Almohor tells me. “We have checkpoints in our minds. We wouldn’t even know what to do with free movement.”

Almohor is middle-aged, a s

Naama Goren-Inbar

Israeli archaeologist and paleoanthropologist

Naama Goren-Inbar (Hebrew: נעמה גורן-ענבר; born July 20, 1948) is an Israeli archaeologist and paleoanthropologist and professor emeritus at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Goren-Inbar excavated many important prehistoric sites in Israel including the Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov. In 2014, she received the EMET Prize in Humanities and Judaism, and in 2016 was elected to the Israel Academy of Sciences.

Early life and education

Naama Goren-Inbar was born in Jerusalem in 1948 to Rachel and Yaakov Goren (author). After completing her military service, she began studying toward her first degree in archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she also earned her MA and PhD (1981). Goren-Inbar's PhD dissertation (supervised by Professor Ofer Bar-Yosef) was dedicated to the study of the lithic assemblage of the Acheulian site of ‘Ubeiydia.[1] She completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Califor

Israeli archaeologist finds common ground underneath Sinai's shifting sands

When Avner Goren walks in your door, thousands of years of history come sweeping in like the desert sands.

After Israel captured the Sinai peninsula from Egypt in the 1967 war, Dr. Goren was appointed chief archaeologist of Israel. He moved his young family to the rugged mountainous region and began getting to know the local Bedouin. By the time he left in 1982, after Egypt and Israel made peace, he had learned Arabic and become thoroughly integrated into the Bedouin culture.

“The people really opened their hearts,” says Goren, a world-renowned archaeologist. “When I’m not careful, I speak about them as ‘my tribe.’ ”

During his time there, he and other archaeologists from around the world uncovered the civilization of Nawamis, the forefathers of the Bedouin, who established homes in the Sinai in the 4th millennium B.C. – before the pyramids were built. Some of the buildings still had roofs on them, making them perhaps the oldest roofs ever found.

“That was a new thing and eve

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