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By Alexander H. Joffe
Archaeologist and Historian.
September 2005
I would like to take this opportunity to comment on Robert Deutsch's response
to my short piece about BAR, wherein he notes I took Moussaieff's money
while a staff member at Megiddo.
Mea culpa. In 1994, 1995, 1996, and 1998, I was a member of the senior
staff at the Megiddo project, directing the excavation of Area H, a major Iron
Age field, and analyzing the Early Bronze Age ceramics. For three of those
seasons, my airfare and room and board were paid by the project; in 1998, I paid
my own way out of the budget of my own project. Or maybe not. I really don't
remember. I’d have to check. I do recall that I received no salary during any of
these seasons.
During that time, Shlomo Moussaieff was a patron of the Megiddo project. I
confess not knowing much about him except that he was an antiquities collector.
He appeared at the excavation in 1994 or 1996 for a visit, chauffeured by Robert
Deutsch, I believe, and I recall saying to the project directors afterwards that
being associated with such a person and his money was bad form.
This was the extent of my outrage, discomfort, and weak protest. Hypocrisy?
Perhaps. I will admit to much greater discomfort, also voiced to the directors
and others, regarding the presence of Robert Deutsch on the project staff. I
felt and still feel that being a graduate student in archaeology and a dealer in
antiquities is a contradiction in terms; one is a position of scholarship and
stewardship; the other is a position of commodification that traffics in objects
and scholarship. But Megiddo was not my project, and the price of my
participation was being Deutsch’s colleague (a wholly benign experience in
itself), and benefiting from Moussaieff's patronage. Again, mea culpa. I
should also confess here to having cashed a check from BAR. They
reprinted one of my reviews of their books. This was a more calculated deed on
my part. I knew they were going to sandbag me, but I reasoned that the
controversy over my critique of their book might be useful to BAR's
readers. I believe I got forty bucks. Maybe it was fifty. As I have said
elsewhere, we all have our price. These were mine. Business acumen has never
been my strong suite.
But Robert Deutsch is an acute businessman. One of my most vivid memories of
the 1995 survey of the western Jezreel Valley came at the site of Mizpe Zevulun,
an Early Bronze Age “enclosure,” where the team found several seal impressions.
I was given permission to publish these, and I did so in the memorial volume for
my late friend Doug Esse. But these discoveries reached an audience far more
quickly. Standing there on the site, within a few moments of their discovery,
Robert Deutsch was talking on his mobile phone to Shlomo Moussaieff in London
describing the finds.
Robert Deutsch states he did not sell Shlomo Moussaieff any objects in the
latter’s collection. If he did not, then I offer my apologies. That Robert
Deutsch wrote an M.A. thesis on objects in Moussaieff's collection, later
published, as well as many articles, and co-edited a festschrift for Moussaieff,
is beyond dispute. That these publications acted as catalogs of Moussaieff's
vanity, testimonials for antiquities collecting, and for Deutsch's own business
is also beyond dispute. The question of sales notwithstanding, in my view,
Deutsch's activities constitute unwholesome collusion in processes that have
both demonstrably degraded the archaeological record through looting and debased
our evidentiary foundations through forgeries and frauds.
My hypocrisy is probably not limited to the matters described above. Yet I
have tried in my various professional lives (and there have been many) to
proceed as ethically and consistently as possible. No doubt my success has been
limited. But in the context of the present discussion, I suggest that the
inconsistency between being a scholar and an antiquities dealer is of
considerably higher order. In this respect at least, my conscience is clear.
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