Proverbs
משלי
Date: 800 av. è.c.–400 av. è.c., Judea/Israel
From foundational texts to family registers: read, compare, annotate — and find your own
Each manuscript, each text in this library is presented under two complementary angles: Memory — what families and communities have lived, transmitted, sung around it; and History — the critical eye of sources, datings, textual variants. A toggle at the top of each record allows you to switch from one to the other, or to read both side by side.
What families carry, lived and transmitted.
Dates, contexts, variants, scholarly sources.
The two readings in parallel columns.
A manuscript does not say the same thing depending on whether one receives it from one's grandmother or discovers it in a critical edition. Memory is embodied, sung, transmitted in a low voice; History is dated, sourced, debated. For a long time, these two registers ignored one another — at times they opposed one another: science against tradition, testimony against document.
Zakhor holds that they are both legitimate, and that they do not tell the same truth. Memory preserves what History does not see: the lived meaning, the voice, the emotional weight. History safeguards what Memory forgets: the dates, the variants, the proofs. By reading them together, one renders a heritage alive without ceasing to be exact. This is the condition for a tradition to pass through the ages — and it is particularly decisive at a time when artificial intelligence blurs the boundary between authenticity and fabrication.
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