Boy, four, smashes open 3,500-year-old jar at Israel museum: ‘He just wanted to see what was inside’

The boy has now become a local celebrity

Israel Broken Ancient Jar
Israel Broken Ancient Jar

A young boy who accidentally broke a rare 3,500-year-old jar in an Israeli museum has been invited back.

Alex Geller, the boy’s father, said his -four-year-old son is exceptionally curious, and that the moment he heard the crash last Friday, “please let that not be my child” was the first thought that raced through his head.

“He’s not a kid that usually destroys things, he just wanted to see what was inside,” Geller told The ᴀssociated Press.

Vase

The Bronze Age jar is one of many artifacts exhibited out in the open, part of the Hecht Museum’s vision of letting visitors explore history without glᴀss barriers, said Inbar Rivlin, the director of the museum, which is ᴀssociated with Haifa University in northern Israel.

Rivlin said the jar was displayed at the museum entrance, and that the family quickly left without finishing their visit. She wants to use the restoration as an educational opportunity and make sure they feel welcome to return.

Geller and his family live in the northern Israeli town of Nahariya, just a few kilometers (miles) south of the border with Lebanon, in an area that has come under Hezbollah rocket fire for more than 10 months in a conflict linked to the war in Gaza.

Israel Broken Ancient Jar

They were spending the summer break visiting museums and taking day trips around Israel to escape the tensions, Geller said.

There were a lot of kids at the museum that day, and Geller said he fervently prayed the damage had been caused by someone else. When he turned around and saw it was his son, he was “in complete shock.”

“My wife responded faster than me, she grabbed our son to take him outside and calm him down and explain that it was not OK what had happened,” said Geller.

He went over to the security guards to let them know what had happened in hopes that it was a model and not a real artifact.

“We said, if we need to pay we will, whatever will be will be. But they called and said it was insured and after they checked the cameras and saw it wasn’t vandalism they invited us back for a make-up visit.”

Related Posts

Unraveling El Fuerte: Bolivia’s Enigmatic Archaeological Site of Samaipata

Deep in the heart of Bolivia’s Santa Cruz Department lies one of South America’s most perplexing archaeological enigmas. The ancient site of Samaipata, with its mᴀssive carved…

A Brief History of Bog ʙuттer

Turf cutters in Ireland regularly find chunks of ʙuттer deep in the nation’s peat bogs. What is the stuff doing there? Recently, Jack Conway was “cutting turf,” the…

Turkish fisherman opens museum with 15,000 mummified sea creatures

A unique, alien-looking, fish is on display in the Turkish Sea Creatures Museum, Istanbul, Turkey, March 25, 2021. (AA PH๏τo) by Anadolu Agency Mar 26, 2021 7:30 pm…

Let’s see what’s wrong with you: Egyptian mummy goes through CT scan

Medical radiology technicians prepare a CT scan to do a radiological examination of an Egyptian mummy in order to investigate its history at the Policlinico hospital in…

Famed Pennsylvania mummy known as ‘Stoneman Willie’ is FINALLY identified and buried – 128 YEARS after his death

After more than a century, the town of Reading, Pennsylvania closed the casket on Saturday on its oddest-ever resident – a mummified man who was finally buried, 128 years…

Up in arms: Mexican archaeological bureau denounces damage to at least one mummy in Guanajuato’s famous museum

Local authorities respond that mummy deterioration is not new and even inevitable given a history of visitors “touching them or taking souvenirs, such as bits of clothing”…