supposed location of the Valley of Eshcol, courtesy, ACallToTheRemnant.com |
Many years later, during the period of the exodus from Egypt, the Children of Israel camped in the Wilderness of Paran, today in the central Negev Desert just south of the Judean Desert, and from there, Moses sent twelve spies to spy out the Promised Land and bring back a report. Two of the spies made their way to this valley and, along with some pomegranates and figs, also brought back a cluster of grapes hanging on a pole carried by the two as proof of the fruitfulness of the land. Soon, the name “Eshcol” became the Hebrew word for “cluster”.
Today, scholars and historians disagree as
to where the Valley is actually located, but there seems to be a consensus that
it might be a wadi, known in Arabic as “Wadi Tuffah”, just to the north of
historic Hebron and in the vicinity of the neighborhood of Mamre, where Abraham pitched his tent. Part of the neighborhood is now,
an archaeological site called “Elonei
Mamre” and is in fact, bordered on the north by various wadis that are
either terraced or flat farmland. Throughout the Middle Ages into the Modern
Era though, travelers, including Benjamin of Tudela, the 12th
century Jewish traveler from Spain, would describe an abundance of grape vines
in this area. American archaeologist Edward Robinson in the 1830s described these
grapes as the largest in the Land of Israel. But on the other hand, in 1850,
the Jewish scientist and rabbi Yehoseph Schwarz visited the area west of Hebron
known as “Wadi Azarar” and declared
it to be the actual Valley of Eshcol.
Today,
the areas to the north and west of Hebron are Arab-occupied areas within the
municipal boundaries of Hebron. It is also surrounded by hostile Arab settlements
that were established in the last century due to the influx of Arab migrants
that suddenly expanded the city without any regard to its Biblical and historic
character. Consequently, any concrete clues to the exact location of the Valley
were summarily obliterated.
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