Leading
biblical scholars and archaeologists have argued for decades about the
actual route of the biblical Exodus from Egypt. Join Rawicz as she
follows the route that Moses and the Israelites took as they fled Egypt
three and a half millennia ago. Margaret Malka Rawicz treks through
treacherous deserts and terrain with her Bedouin guides, in order to
rediscover and identify the sites of the first fifteen known Israelite
encampments. She then explores another eighteen encampments in Eastern
Sinai, along the Israeli/Sinai border and in the Negev Desert, and the
final nine in Jordan.
Including photographs and personal stories, Walking the Exodus is not only one individual's discovery, but also a personal and spiritual transformation of one's life.
About the Author:
Margaret
Malka Rawicz has developed and refined lectures on the Exodus for many
years after extensively traveling through Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi,
Southern Africa, North and South America, Eastern Europe, Egypt, Israel,
Jordan and Antarctica. As an environmental management consultant, she
has received numerous awards on groundbreaking national work. Rawicz has
delivered many presentations on the Exodus, and her extensive trip
through the Sinai desert has been adapted into a TV documentary, Forty Years to Freedom. She acknowledges the support of her late husband during all this time.
Margaret
Rawicz can arrange trips to take people on tours of the Exodus route.
If you are interested in going on a tour, please visit
www.WalkingTheExodus.co.za to register. To arrange visual presentations
and lectures, please contact the author at margaraw@netactive.co.za.
Praise for Walking the Exodus:
“When,
in one individual, an intrepid spirit meets an insatiable appetite for
discovery, some delightful odyssey is bound to be the outcome. Malka
(Margaret) Rawicz has pioneered creative ways of discovering and
presenting facets of Torah that would daunt other students and seasoned
educators. She also has a knack for blithely embarking on jaw-dropping
journeys, from the African bush to the Antarctic. In this book, which
reads like a cross between a camel-back adventure story and a piece of
meticulous research, the author shares with the reader both these
fascinating facets of herself. It is particularly refreshing that the
research takes the biblical account of the Exodus and the subsequent
journeys of the Israelites at its word. It seeks to verify that account
by geographical, physical, and linguistic evidence.”