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THE DELUGE.

BIBLE STORY CONFIRMED. PARALLEL INUNDATIONS TO-DAY. "FOUNTAINS OF THE DEEP." i Lieutenant-General Sir George MasMunn, writing in the London "Daily Telegraph" mentions that during the world war he was for three years Inspector-General of Communications in Mesopotamia, and held command there in the year following the war. During those years he travelled 25,000 miles in his river steamer on the Tigris and Euphrates, and before going there was able to pay what is best described as a pilgrimage to that famous irrigation engineer, Sir William Willcocks, then residing in Egypt. General MacMunn's article goes on as follows: — Sir William had been employed shortly before the war by the Turkish Government to plan the revival of the ancient canal system of Babylonia. A few months before the war commenced the engineering firm of Sir John Jackson had completed the Hindya barrage on the Euphrates, and had built the dam partly with bricks from Babylon bearing the name stamp of Nebuchadnezzar. Sir William is an enthusiastic student and interpreter of the Old Testament, and especially of Genesis; and he was good enough to give me his original tracings and notes. I was therefore able to study the rivers under the best auspices, and probably no one before or since has had the time to spend in moving up and down the streams and puzzling over all that has been said about them. System of Land Tenure. When the Turkish officials fled before us, they left no machinery of government behind, so that the British had to organise a temporary administration in rear of their fighting troops. Among the many problems that are mixed up with revenue arc those of land tenure. We soon found, especially when acquiring land for army purposes, that you might buy land, but that you had not necessarily become the owner of the trees thereon. A separate transaction with a owner might be necessary. This, then, is why we are told that, when Abraham obtained the field of Machpelah in Mamre as a place of sepulture, he saw that "the field and the cave therein, and all the trees that were in the field. . . were made sure" exactly as he would have to do to this day. Now, the remarkable thing about it all is that almost every item in Genesis that can be cross-checked with other records is substantiated, so that it is not too much to accept as equally authentic, and that without infringing the laws which science has discovered, statements that cannot be cross-checked. The Story of the Flood. But it Is the story of the Flood that the traversing of the land with levels and a theodolite brings out in such extreme accuracy. First of all, however, to read it as it unfolds, it is essential to put away the idea that the story in Genesis has anything to do of necesi sity with floods recorded or shown in i other parts of the world, or with the , traces of great waters and their results. i The story is the story of what happens

each year in Iraq only considerably intensified by unusual happenings. And we must allow that through the ages the story has been developed beyond its original scope. The year that saw the fall of Kut was a year of unusual flood, and the army was intensely hampered thereby in its efforts for the relief. A few days after Kut fell, in the spring of 1916, I was on the Hamar Lake in my steamer, moving up the Euphrates, close to Ur of the Chaldees, whose mounds could be seen far away, but save for that there was no land visible north, south, east, or west, and only now and again a palm top. Sir William Willcocks assumes that Noah was a big sheik and landowner somewhere in the vicinity of Babylon, 300 miles above Ur, that, wise in his generation, forewarned of God, he had prepared for the troubles that a weakening regime was bringing in the deterioration of the irrigation dams, which, from earliest times, were an essential of life on the Euphrates. Deteriorated dams and unusual weather brought the nemesis. The Gates of Heaven opened, and the usual spring floods of rainwater and melting snow from the Armenian uplands brought a gigantic flood, that swept all before it, and carried Noah's vessel, with his families and his breeding stock, far away south to the swamps, where is now the Hamar Lake, and then no doubt the head of the Persian Gulf. A Wall of Water. The "Gates of Heaven" opening is a clear enough description of rainstorms and snow, but we have something more effective than that. We are told that the "Fountains of the Deep came up." Now, to this day, every spring for forty days the south-west Shumal prevails in the Gulf, and it blows the sea water up like a wall for seventy miles and more over the dry flats of the land on either side of the rivers, but especially on the Ur side. Because of this wall of sea the floods cannot run off the land. And the heavy spring floods to this day happen exactly as described in Genesis, when the "Fountains of the Deep" meet the waters that come from the opening of the "Gates of Heaven." Now, if you ask an Arab to-day what he calls the country that lies between the Tigris and Euphrates, a low plain, he will call it the "gebel." But "gebel" also means mountain. The flood prevailed, we are told, 15 cubits (27 feet), and the gebel was covered. Which meaning of gebel shall we use! The rendering that "the waters prevailed 27 feet and the mountains were covered," or the one in use in Irak to-day, "the gebel," the low plateau between the rivers? | Then again to-day the usual rise in I the flood season is perhaps 12 feet, and! the riparian villagers have to protect themselves with high banks, and all the rivers have a flood bank, wherever there is cultivation to be damaged. A rise of 27 feet would drown everyone, for there are no hills of refuge, while even a crowding on to some slight mound would but mean starvation. And, further, if Ararat is but a glutinative Summerian for a mound, it is a name which tradition alone can have given later to the huge mountain top of Armenia. The slightly raised plateau was flooded; there was no escape; the rain and 6now-water floods were blocked by the in-blown sea as to-day; and the great boat was washed down to the swamps of the lower Euphrates, stuck on an ararat—the debris, possibly, of a mud village—and came to rest near Ur, where, generations later, we find Noah's descendant, Abraham, stepping on to the page of history. One can almost see the story happening under one's eyes.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19281103.2.165.43

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 8 (Supplement)

Word Count
1,148

THE DELUGE. Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 8 (Supplement)

THE DELUGE. Auckland Star, Volume LIX, Issue 261, 3 November 1928, Page 8 (Supplement)