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Russia’s imperialist crimes are all foretold in the Hebrew Bible

The brutal approach of Putin’s army in Ukraine contains echoes of ancient empires, such as the Assyrians and Babylonians

June 1, 2022 12:19
GettyImages-1316121095 (1)
Woodcut of a war scene with chariots and one of paying tribute from the bronze plates on the Balawat Gates. Commissioned by the Assryian king Ashurnasirpal II. Presently in the Museum. In Springer, Anton, 1888, History of Art Picture Sheets, concise edition (new, completely reworked, systematically ordered edition) - Atlas of the basics of art history from antiquity to the end of the 18th century
5 min read

Russia, in brutally terrorising Ukraine, has committed crimes all-too-familiar in Jewish history. It has turned cities to rubble, made standard military practice of torture, mutilation, rape, theft, murder, and mass destruction, and undertaken massive “ethnic cleansing” of millions of Ukrainians who face “resettlement” far from home. All of this contains echoes of the Hebrew Bible in the age of the great Near Eastern empires, Assyria, Babylonia, and Persia.

Assyria, the first extended empire in history, sprawled across the entire Fertile Crescent, from the Persian Gulf to the Nile Delta. It conquered the kingdom of Israel in 721 BCE and two decades later nearly did the same to the kingdom of Judah, where dozens of towns — including Lachish, whose siege is portrayed on reliefs in the British Museum -— were besieged and subjected to atrocities that prefigured the 2022 Russian invasion.

Assyrian pictorial art and literature contain graphic war images, such as people flayed alive, chained in cages, immured, tongues, eyes, and genitals cut off and fed to dogs, burned, impaled, heads and corpses in piles.

The Bible gives vivid glimpses of Assyrian psychological warfare, notably an episode repeated three times in the Hebrew Bible (in the books of Kings and Chronicles, and in Isaiah): In the failed siege of Jerusalem, north of Lachish (c. 701 BCE), the Assyrian spokesman outside the city walls argues — in fluent Hebrew, aimed at demoralising the Judeans on the ramparts — that God is on the Assyrian side.

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