Walking into Assistant Professor of Religion Dr. Trisha Broy鈥檚 office is like entering a miniature museum of archeology. She has trays of ancient ceramic shards, a stone ax head and even a mostly intact clay jar, all of which she found at various archaeological dig sites. But Broy鈥檚 favorite thing to show is a 3D-printed replica of a mysterious Egyptian statue.
鈥淭his is the coolest thing we鈥檝e ever found,鈥 said Broy. 鈥淭his statue came from the late Middle Kingdom of Egypt, but was found in a much later deposit in Jordan in a non-Egyptian settlement. He鈥檚 made of dark stone and worn, as if he鈥檚 been touched a lot particularly in the feet and face. It鈥檚 a mystery how he got there. It鈥檚 such a unique artifact that the original went to a museum in Amman, Jordan.鈥
Over the last 25 years, Broy has excavated in Jordan, Sicily and Tennessee. However, with her master鈥檚 in Egyptology and doctorate in biblical archeology, her favorite digs are those in Jordan. She鈥檚 spent the last few summers at Khirbet Safra, an archaeological site with ruins dating back to the 13th century B.C.
鈥淚 get so fascinated by the artifacts we find there,鈥 said Broy. 鈥淭housands of years ago, somebody was making the jars we find with their hands in the clay. It’s such a connection with the ancient people.鈥
At the moment, Broy is focusing her archaeological research on finding clarity on ancient Egyptian interactions in Jordan, inspired by the discovery of the Egyptian statue and other artifacts at Khirbet Saftra. She said, 鈥淭o put it in perspective, these are the only artifacts that have ever been found in Jordan originating from this time period that come from Egypt like this. We have a lot of knowledge on what happened on the west side of the Jordan river, but not as much about the east side. We鈥檙e working to better understand why we have this Egyptian material, especially since Khirbet Saftra is very small and out of the way. There鈥檚 no reason why it was a big site in antiquity.鈥
Broy鈥檚 passion for Biblical archaeology brings the scriptures alive for her students at Union College. She said, 鈥淎 lot of my students have heard the stories in the Bible since they were little children, and sometimes they lose connection with them in the real world. What archeology does for me, and hopefully for my students, is bring the Bible back into perspective. These are real people and real events that happened in real space and real time. Archeology brings tangibleness to the stories. It gives you that sensory experience with the past, which makes it more real.鈥
This semester, Broy is teaching Pentateuch, Biblical Hebrew I, and Introduction to Christian Faith and Adventism. 鈥淎ll my classes are fun to teach,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 can’t pick a favorite, but I have favorite aspects of each of them. It鈥檚 like trying to pick your favorite child.鈥
鈥淢y Pentateuch class covers the first five books of the Bible. My Egyptology background bubbles up there as we talk about the Exodus. Hebrew is primarily taken by junior and senior theology majors, so it鈥檚 just a great group of students who are dedicated to the ministry and are wanting to dig deeper into Biblical language.
鈥淚 love teaching Introduction to Christian Faith and Adventism, because for a lot of the students these topics are new. It鈥檚 like going to Disney World with someone who鈥檚 never been there before and seeing the wonder in their eyes, only better. Even though I鈥檓 revisiting these Biblical topics such as salvation, exploring them with students for the first time is always exciting.鈥
by Annika Cambigue, senior English and communication major