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Journalist Claims To Find Nails From Jesus' Cross

Jesus Nails

First Posted: 04/12/11 08:05 PM ET Updated: 06/12/11 06:12 AM ET

By Michele Chabin
Religion News Service

JERUSALEM (RNS) An Israeli-Canadian journalist believes he may have tracked down two of the iron nails used to crucify Jesus to the cross. Or at least objects that "could be" the long-lost relics.

While researching a segment for the History Channel series "Secrets of Christianity," host and producer Simcha Jacobovici learned something that startled him: In 1990, Israeli archeologists excavating a 2,000-year-old burial cave discovered two nails crafted by the Romans, but kept the discovery quiet.

They did, however, publicize the discovery of two ossuaries -- stone burial boxes filled with human bones -- with the inscriptions "Caiaphas" and "Joseph son of Caiaphas." The latter intricately carved ossuary toured the world and is now prominently displayed in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

According to the Gospels, Caiaphas was the Jewish high priest who handed Jesus over to the Romans for crucifixion.

"There's a general scholarly consensus that the tomb where the nails were found likely belonged to Caiaphas. Nails at that time were a dime a dozen, but finding one in a tomb is exceedingly rare," Jacobovici said outside the high stone walls of the Old City, where Jesus spent his final days.

When Jacobovici found a brief reference to the nails in the official archeologists' report, "my jaw dropped," he said.

"It would be as if, 2,000 years from now, archaeologists uncovered the cave of Muhammad Ali but neglected to mention the pair of boxing gloves found there. Sure, boxing gloves are common, but perhaps those particular gloves had special significance to the boxer?"

Jacobovici also hosts the "Naked Archaeologist" series on History International and collaborated with filmmaker James Cameron on the controversial 2007 documentary, "The Lost Tomb of Jesus."

In the segment "Nails of the Cross," which will air on April 20 on the History Channel, Jacobovici attempts to discover why the researchers felt the nails were unimportant.

"Everything else is so meticulous, yet there are no photos or drawings or measurements of the nails. When I inquired at the Israel Antiquities Authority, I was told they had gone missing."

"Caiaphas is known for one thing only: the trial and Crucifixion of Jesus," Jacobovici said. "He may have felt compelled to take these nails with him to his grave."

There was also the belief among some ancient Jews that nails had healing powers "and were a ticket to the afterlife. Other items found in the tomb show that this was a superstitious guy," he added.

The history detective searched the IAA's vast warehouses and then tried to find the location of the long-sealed tomb, which now lies beneath a public park.

Finally, on a hunch, Jacobovici approached Israel Hershkovitz, a forensic anthropologist at Tel Aviv University, who is also expert on crucifixions.

"When I asked Hershkovitz if he'd received two nails about 20 years ago, he knew exactly what I was talking about and located them within minutes," Jacobovici recalled.

Hershkovitz could not say where the nails had been found because the original packaging lacked the information. He could not be reached for comment.

While Hershkovitz knows for certain the nails came from the IAA, there's no conclusive link that they came from the Caiaphas tomb. Israeli archaeologists seem as reluctant to comment this time around as they were back in 1990.

When the anthropologist showed Jacobovici an ancient heel bone impaled with a nail -- the only such crucifixion specimen ever unearthed -- "I realized that the Caiaphas nails were similar, though shorter. The tips appeared purposely bent to keep them from falling off the wood."

Jacobovici asked Hershkovitz whether the nails could have been used to crucify a person's hands to a cross. Hershkovitz said "yes."

The limestone residue on one of the nails clinched it for Jacobovici, "because one of the nails was found in the ossuary, the other on the ground" of the burial cave, where it would be exposed to limestone.

Gabriel Barkay, a professor of archaeology at Bar-Ilan University, called Jacobovici's investigation "very challenging, very interesting, very intriguing, but it's a TV show and not a scholarly study.

"There's no proof whatsoever that they originate in the tomb of Caiaphas," he said. "It's all conjecture."

Nails were used for "many purposes," Barkay noted, "from fixing iron gates to wooden doors and coffins."

And for crucifixions.

Ronny Reich, a Haifa University archeologist who deciphered the writing in the Caiaphas cave, believes the cave "belongs to a member of the Caiaphas family, but we have no evidence it belongs to the high priest."

Jacobovici, however, is certain his research will withstand scrutiny, even if it seems largely circumstantial at first glance.

"Skepticism is good. As with the Shroud of Turin, you can't be 100 percent certain, but believers don't need 100 percent certainty. They need a solid 'could be,' and that's what we're offering."

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By Michele Chabin Religion News Service JERUSALEM (RNS) An Israeli-Canadian journalist believes he may have tracked down two of the iron nails used to crucify Jesus to the cross. Or at least objec...
By Michele Chabin Religion News Service JERUSALEM (RNS) An Israeli-Canadian journalist believes he may have tracked down two of the iron nails used to crucify Jesus to the cross. Or at least objec...
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04:28 PM on 04/21/2011
Simcha Jacobovici must have also planted Obama's birth announcements in the newspapers.

This is ridiculous. His conjectures only work if every thing in the gospels is taken literally. Fact is we don't have any evidence that Jesus existed at all. He is only mentioned briefly in one other book decades after his supposed crucifiction. misspelling intended.
12:24 AM on 04/21/2011
Am I the only person thinking journalist Simcha Jacobovici , is full of it. This guy takes a lot of liberties in suggesting what he thinks happened in every history investigation he embarks on. I so over it.
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cookgoose
07:52 PM on 04/18/2011
This quote here makes absolute sense NOW..... A fact never went into partnership with a miracle. Truth scorns the assistance of wonders. A fact will fit every other fact in the universe, and that is how you can tell whether it is or is not a fact. A lie will not fit anything except another lie.
Robert Green Ingersoll
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timm553
In vino veritas
04:45 PM on 04/18/2011
I'm thinking that Jesus isn't in the DNA database, so how do they lend any validity to this. This guy should be smacked, good.
02:12 AM on 04/18/2011
One of the most stupid articles I have ever read!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
timm553
In vino veritas
04:30 PM on 04/17/2011
You absolutely MUST be kidding me. I say that because I know there are those who won't think that you are. More's the pity.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
03:59 PM on 04/17/2011
Every since the Shroud of Turon was discredited, they had to find something new to prove the Savior's credibility. Hey! Found a rusty nail! .
02:13 AM on 04/18/2011
I found some of those down at my grandpa's barn. Why were there only two nails?
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European1919
I am the PigmⒶn
02:15 AM on 04/18/2011
So he had one hand free to wave at his fans.
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zwyziec
We've Peaked!
03:08 PM on 04/17/2011
http://www­­.targetma­p­.com/vie­we­r.aspx?­rep­ortId=­3073

It was recently reported that his foreskin was found in a cave in Jordan. By its size, he had a moderate member.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
04:05 PM on 04/17/2011
And not only that, but he had several...

"According to the author David Farley, "Depending on what you read, there were eight, twelve, fourteen, or even 18 different holy foreskins in various European towns during the Middle Ages"

Maybe he re-grew them, like a lizard tail.
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zwyziec
We've Peaked!
04:42 PM on 04/17/2011
That's a great visual!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NYC123
05:39 AM on 04/17/2011
I also have an authentic nail home from Jesus' crucifixion used to holdup the bathroom towels! No biggy!
12:48 AM on 04/17/2011
Then of course , one must tell the story of the terrible disability that Jesus has been forced to
live...err...exist with all these years. Jesus and Moses were walking by the seashore. Moses
is a bit older than Jesus, but he wanted to show him that he still had it. So Moses raised his staff and separated the waters of the ocean, and then lowered his staff and the water returned to its original place. Well, Jesus was not gonna be shown up by an old man, so he proceeded to walk upon the water. He got a few steps out, and then suddenly sank, and was floundering in the waves. Moses quickly raised his staff, separated the waters, and walked out and carried Jesus back to shore. "I just don't understand it, Moses, why did I sink?" Moses replied, "oh don't worry Jesus, you didn't have holes in your feet the last time you tried that trick."
12:41 AM on 04/17/2011
If ya really want to know the story of where the 3 nails that crucified Jesus are, well you have to talk to the Jerusalem Inn keeper. Oh, you don't know that story.

Jesus walked into the Jerusalem Inn, and placed three nails on the check in counter. He spoke something to the innkeeper. It was in Aramaic, so let me roughly translate it for you. Okay,
where was I. Oh yeah, Jesus walks into the Jerusalem Inn, and places three nails on the counter and tells the inn keeper...."Innkeeper, here are three nails.........can you put me up for the night."
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
04:09 PM on 04/17/2011
Or Jesus is on the cross and convinces a Roman guard to take the nails out. The first comes out, "Ahhh!" he says, That's much better. The second comes out, "Wonderful!", he exclaims. Then suddenly he yells as he falls forward, "The Feet! The Feet!"
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pphhrogg
domestic clown goddess
06:43 PM on 04/16/2011
You can add the words "could be" to ANY sentence and make it possible. This "journalist" is just out to make money, and it's a cinch that gullible fools will buy into his find.
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nomadrdw
Zen Druid
06:41 PM on 04/16/2011
some people will look to anything for confirmation of their fanatical beliefs. don't really see any difference between this and those people that find the face of Jebus on toast and in potato chips
02:17 AM on 04/16/2011
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
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TheWM
aka The Wrong Monkey
12:20 PM on 04/16/2011
Not on the History Channel.
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TheWM
aka The Wrong Monkey
12:21 PM on 04/16/2011
-- well, also not in theology, generally.
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David Weidner
Ask me about my narcissism!
09:26 PM on 04/15/2011
Evidence of Christianity's claims, never fails to disappoint.