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2,800-YEAR-OLD SCARAB DISCOVERED BY HIKER IN LOWER GALILEE
Israel21c ^ | February 11

Posted on 02/12/2024 5:39:36 PM PST by nickcarraway

In an exciting turn for the archeological community, a 2,800-year-old engraved stone known as a “scarab” was discovered in Israel’s Tabor Stream Nature Reserve by hiker Erez Avrahamov in early February.

Avrahamov, 45, found the scarab, a small orange stone roughly the size of a thumbnail, during a recreational hike in the Lower Galilee.

“I had a two-day leave from the military and decided to take advantage of the sunny days for a trip,” Avrahamov recounted. “During the trip, I saw something sparkling on the ground. At first, I thought it was a bead or an orange stone. After picking it up, I noticed engravings on it resembling a scarab. I contacted and reported the amazing find to the Israel Antiquities Authority.”

Nir Distelfeld of the Theft Prevention Unit at the Israel Antiquities Authority asked Avrahamov to look closely at the flat side of the scarab to check if it was engraved.

“Immediately I heard an exclamation of amazement over the phone, and he reported to me that he identified a figure,” said Distelfeld.

Further analysis at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland revealed that the scarab, crafted from carnelian, depicted a griffin or a winged horse galloping, characteristic of artwork from the eighth century BCE.

The scarab, a type of seal common throughout the region from the fourth millennium BCE onwards, presents a valuable artifact for understanding ancient civilizations.

Yitzhak Paz, an archeologist at the Israel Antiquities Authority, said it is signficant that the scarab was found in Tel Rekhesh, an ancient historic site linked to the city of Anacharath mentioned in the Bible (Joshua 19:19).

“The scarab … may be from the period of the Assyrian rule and may indicate the presence of Assyrian officials (or perhaps Babylonian) at Tel Rekhesh during this period. The griffin appearing on the seal is a known artistic motif in Ancient Near Eastern art and is common on seals from the Iron Age,” Paz explained.

“If indeed the seal can be dated to the late Iron Age based on iconographic considerations, it may be possible to link the seal to the Assyrian presence in the citadel of Tel Rekhesh, which may be a discovery of great significance.”

Eli Escusido, director of the Israeli Antiquities Authority, said the special scarab will be preserved in the IAA’s national treasures department for further research.

“Every winter, with the arrival of the rainy season, antiquities begin to ‘float’ and rise above the surface. I urge the public to adhere to the Antiquities Law and ask that if you come across an archaeological find, report it to the Israel Antiquities Authority immediately from the site. The exact place of discovery is crucial for extracting knowledge about it,” he said.

Solomon Geveye recently established the Haile Venture Capital Fund, the first investment vehicle for pre-seed startups with disruptive technologies in which at least one founder is from Israel’s Ethiopian community.

Haile means “within my power” in Amharic. Geveye hopes to empower fellow Israeli Ethiopians to explore high-tech entrepreneurship, a path few take and that he has trailblazed.

In 2019, he founded the IEA (Israel, Ethiopia, America) consultancy to facilitate projects between Israeli startups, and some American companies, in advanced African countries such as Nigeria, South Africa and Ethiopia.

In 2021, he and two Israeli Ethiopian cofounders started MetekuAI to combat fake news and disinformation on social media with automated, AI-powered credible content generation and distribution.

“Like other startups, it’s having challenges now,” he admits. “I’m still a partner there but I took a step back to focus on this new passion of mine.”

Infant stages

Geveye says that about 2,000 Israeli Ethiopian professionals are currently integrated into high-tech but not in top management positions.

“We really have potential in terms of talent, and the situation gets better every year, but in entrepreneurship we are in the infant stages,” he says.

In comparison to efforts encouraging entrepreneurship among haredim (ultra-Orthodox Jews), Arabs and women, he says, “the private and public sector wasn’t putting in resources to make it happen.”

The plan is for Haile to open an entrepreneurship and acceleration program at Reichman University’s Google and Reichman Tech School this summer, backed by the Israel Innovation Authority. Geveye currently has 13 early-stage companies in the pipeline seeking pre-seed investment.

Among them are GoatPlay, a sports-tech startup bringing advanced IoT (Internet of Things) to playground games; Trado, an AI-powered ecommerce platform for buyers and sellers to manage their money simply and transparently; and health-tech startup Inhalify, which lets parents continuously monitor a child’s inhaler usage, enabling doctors to create personalized treatment plans.

Geveye, now 38, was six years old when he and his family were airlifted to Israel in 1991 during an operation that brought more than 14,300 Ethiopian Jews to the historic homeland they’d never seen but always yearned for.

A gifted student, he earned a degree in economics at Ariel University through an academic reserves program of the Atidim (Futures) organization, which helps talented young people from underserved and marginalized communities pursue meaningful careers.

After graduation and officer training in the Israel Defense Forces, he served as an IDF economist for seven and a half years. He earned a master’s in business administration along the way.

“About 300 economists manage the whole IDF budget,” he tells ISRAEL21c. “It was a challenging and great experience to be handling multimillion-dollar budgets and having discussions with brigadier generals at such an early age. It was like jumping into deep water.”

Completing his service in 2014 with the rank of captain, Geveye got married and relocated to California, where his wife earned her MBA while he worked in finance and ran a boutique security company.

“We always intended to come back to Israel at some point, but we returned after five and a half years, in early 2019, because my mother was ill and I wanted to take care of her,” says Geveye. “I am grateful that I was here, and not far away, when she passed.”

Overcoming challenges

Geveye notes that his wife is of Iraqi and Romanian heritage, so their three young children are racially mixed. Yet he believes they can prosper in Israel unhindered by discrimination, if they follow his example of working hard to achieve their goals.

He acknowledges, however, that Ethiopian immigrants faced a lot of obstacles, and prejudice is one of them.

“In my opinion, even though I experienced some racist incidents as a kid and in school, I see it as something that is not systematic but that happened to the Moroccans and Yemenites before me, and in some sense to the Russians as well. Israel hasn’t really learned how to absorb immigrants, especially those from weaker financial backgrounds,” he says.

At the same time, overcoming difficulties has a silver lining: “Studies show that immigrants who have experienced challenges in acclimatization have valuable skills and traits that can make them successful entrepreneurs, including adaptability, resilience, and a high tolerance for risk.”

These traits are important for Geveye himself as he tries to attract investment in Haile during a difficult time in Israel.

“Until the war, we were in discussions with VCs and angel investors to back our VC. Because of the war, we now have some funding problems. The Israel Innovation Authority wasn’t able to give us the full budget we expected and other partners are rethinking their investment,” he explains.

“We have a gap of $150,000 to start the program this July. We are optimistic but still looking for backers to join us. We are making lots of efforts to make it happen.”

Social change

Haile advisory board member Ifat Lavi, who has a PhD in biomedical engineering and 25 years of experience in the medical device industry and entrepreneurship, says Haile has the potential “to increase the number of Ethiopians in Israel’s high-tech industry and by that to create a social change for them.”

Lavi also is a technology reviewer at the Israel Innovation Authority and a board member of Haile partner organization Tech-Career, which trains Israeli Ethiopians for high-tech jobs.

She tells ISRAEL21c that she’d like to see some of the thousands of the community’s computer science and engineering graduates already employed in high-tech become managers within their companies.

“The goal is not just to found startups, but to go from junior roles to more leading roles,” she explains.

“I believe the high-tech industry is the engine of the Israeli economy. When I was young, everyone said the army is the best area for integration but today I think it’s the high-tech industry.”


TOPICS: History; Local News; Outdoors
KEYWORDS: egypt; epigraphyandlanguage; erezavrahamov; godsgravesglyphs; hiking; israel; scarab
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To: doorgunner69

Wonder if that’s Scarab designer/builder Lance Reventlow at the wheel?


21 posted on 02/12/2024 6:47:44 PM PST by Huaynero
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To: Huaynero

The pic was apparently from a 2005 vintage race, so who knows how old Lance would have been?

Helped being a Revlon heir to build such sweet toys.


22 posted on 02/12/2024 6:59:54 PM PST by doorgunner69 (When tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty)
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To: nickcarraway

And the Curse Begins!


23 posted on 02/12/2024 7:55:38 PM PST by Revel
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To: nickcarraway

Looks like an image of a swan in the water.


24 posted on 02/12/2024 9:33:47 PM PST by 353FMG
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To: doorgunner69
When I was a kid, they looked like this:

IMG-20160213-173108
25 posted on 02/12/2024 10:11:46 PM PST by golux
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To: nickcarraway

Because you never hike in Israel?........................


26 posted on 02/13/2024 5:23:57 AM PST by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: nickcarraway

Looks like one of those hard candies.


27 posted on 02/13/2024 6:51:55 AM PST by ro_dreaming (Who knew "Idiocracy", "1984", "Enemy of the State", and "Person of Interest" would be non-fiction?)
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To: FreedomPoster

Another life
Not sure who that guy was


28 posted on 02/13/2024 7:54:26 AM PST by wardaddy (I have seen true anti semitism is more common in USA than I imagined. A disease in the public mind)
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To: Verginius Rufus

The snow in New York City may seriously reduce the turnout in today’s election. Apparently the Democrats have an edge in the early voting. The weather should be better in the afternoon. The Republican candidate is named Pilip.


29 posted on 02/13/2024 8:22:58 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: algore; FreedomPoster; Travis McGee; Pelham

She the girl…was arguably more fun and better constructed

Scarab import boats were shoddy honestly

Chopper gun and screw in deck

I ran 3 EFIs which would push her to 90 or maybe even 100

But in seas she’d start unraveling

I sold her cheap and got a formula 37 needle nose with twin inboards

Twin 500hp Bravo inboards

She’d push around same speed

Much much better built boat

Dream boat was midnight 37 with four EFIs

Best made boat of that era in my view

Boat maker went to the joint sorta slowed the manufacturing

Thunder boat row era

Miami was a great scoot around place

You could lunch in Bimini from Govt Cut or Haulover in an hour in glass seas

Half the time Nobody in Bimini even logged u

Nice lunch head flat out back

About a mile a gallon lol

It’s a truly beautiful environment to have 5-6 million living on the strip tween swamp and sea

Maybe cleanest prettiest place like that on earth

Hong Kong is not as clean

Sydney and Melbourne maybe


30 posted on 02/13/2024 8:24:15 AM PST by wardaddy (I have seen true anti semitism is more common in USA than I imagined. A disease in the public mind)
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To: wardaddy

I recall seeing those called “cigarette boats”. I was always curious how the name originated.


31 posted on 02/13/2024 9:47:59 AM PST by Pelham (President Eisenhower. Operation Wetback 1953-54)
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To: Pelham

Rumrunners from Cuba called cigar boats

Maybe

I barely missed Aronow murder

Just been on the street for parts

An hour earlier

Or so

Jews killing Jews

Kramer was nuts honestly


32 posted on 02/13/2024 10:26:03 AM PST by wardaddy (I have seen true anti semitism is more common in USA than I imagined. A disease in the public mind)
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To: Verginius Rufus

I just got a fundraising text from her / her campaign.


33 posted on 02/13/2024 11:44:22 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: FreedomPoster

I hope she wins—but she would then have to run again in November. Her Democrat opponent held the seat previously.


34 posted on 02/13/2024 11:50:25 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: SunkenCiv

Cheers


35 posted on 02/13/2024 4:12:27 PM PST by Conservat1
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To: golux

Yeah, you be the TV generation.

I bet you just love the current CGI movies that I find unwatchable.

FWIW, I did like MV and have it all on DVD.
I liked the Bren-10 most.


36 posted on 02/14/2024 10:05:08 PM PST by doorgunner69 (When tyranny becomes law, rebellion becomes duty)
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To: nickcarraway

So ... not a 2,800 year-old bug ...

That would really have been something.

A 2,800 year-old rock?

Meh.


37 posted on 02/14/2024 10:18:49 PM PST by x
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