Spiritual quest and crisis in biblical lands

Review Religion

January 08, 2006|By JONATHAN KIRSCH | JONATHAN KIRSCH,LOS ANGELES TIME

Where God Was Born: A Journey by Land to the Roots of Religion

Bruce Feiler

William Morrow / 406 pages

Why is America so enmeshed in the Middle East? Our strategic support for Israel, for example, is usually explained as an alliance with the only democracy in the region. The war in Iraq has been variously presented as a preemptive strike on Saddam Hussein's stockpile of weapons of mass destruction, the opening of a new front in the global war against terrorism and an effort to launch democracy in the Middle East. Seldom mentioned is the fact that all of these geopolitical struggles are being carried out in places that we first read about in the family Bible.

"The Cradle of Civilization - the tiny, fertile crescent of land that stretches from Mesopotamia to North Africa [has] once more seized control of the world's destiny, and the future of civilization seemed to be at stake," writes Bruce Feiler in Where God Was Born, his latest exercise in hot-wiring the ancient biblical texts to facts on the ground in the Middle East. "The collision of politics, geography and faith has dominated nearly every story in the Middle East since the birth of writing - from the epic of Gilgamesh to the fatwas of Ayatollah Khomeini."

Feiler's new book is an account of his recent travels, Bible in hand, through Israel and Iraq, with a short side trip to Iran. In Israel he ponders the biblical account of the Exodus, the conquest of the Promised Land, the kingdom of David and the glories of Solomon's temple. And his sojourn in the war zone of Iraq, site of biblical Babylon, allows him to conjure up the Garden of Eden, the Tower of Babel and the Babylonian exile, among other familiar biblical motifs. "[T]he first war in Iraq," he observes, "was between Cain and Abel."

Iran is something of a stretch from the perspective of the Bible. "Closer to India than to Israel," he writes, "Iran is part of a different ecosystem than much of the Middle East and a different cultural tradition as well." But he points out that an ancient Persian emperor, Cyrus, is honored among "God's anointed" in the Bible because he put an end to the Babylonian exile and sanctioned the construction of the second temple. "No group benefited more from Cyrus's magnanimity than the Jews," writes Feiler, "and no document heralds his greatness more than the Bible."

Feiler, author of the best-selling Walking the Bible and Abraham, is hardly the first to tread these paths. Mark Twain's The Innocents Abroad, Karen Armstrong's Jerusalem: One City, Three Faiths and other books have surveyed the same territory, often with more edge and authority. But Feiler (who briefly references my work in this book) has established a kind of franchise in the contemporary biblical travelogue, mastering a formula that blends armchair adventure, pop archaeology and spiritual uplift.

Feiler tends to dramatize his experiences. Thus, for example, an excursion by helicopter above Israel is rendered as a moment of crisis and then revelation: "I feel as if I'm in a full-body migraine," he writes. "And then, just as suddenly, quiet. The sound dissolves, my body relaxes. I'm in the air, in a war. I'm at peace," he continues, referring to the armed conflict between Israel and its Palestinian-Arab adversaries.

Indeed, Where God Was Born is essentially a confessional work. "For years I ran decisions through the part of me rooted in my hometown in Georgia and the part grounded in my Ivy League education. Now I also ran them through the Bible and the lens of meaning provided by the ancient stories," he writes. "The Bible, which for so long had seemed the refuge of the past, suddenly seemed the most vital route for making sense of the tumult of the hour."

To his credit, Feiler concedes that the Bible he carries and consults throughout his travels across the Middle East is not a book of history in the modern sense. "After two centuries of aggressive digging, archeologists have come to what can be characterized as an awkward accommodation with the Hebrew Bible," he notes. "For the Torah, there is simply no physical evidence that any of the events described took place."

Nor does Feiler shrink from the harsh theological implications of violence in the name of God. "There is one God, and God controls the world," insists a Hasidic Jew in the aftermath of a terrorist suicide bombing in Jerusalem. "God controls the bomb, and the bomber." In fact, Feiler, who is Jewish, experiences a soul-shaking spiritual crisis after visiting the Jewish homeland, and he ends up distancing himself from the Bible: "I was learning that I could no longer rely on the once familiar pillars of my religious identity: King David, the Temple, the Western Wall. I had to find my own route to God."

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