Arabs in Ancient Rabbinic Texts

2nd–6th Centuries
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The rabbis of late antiquity were very aware that Arabs—tribal communities from the Arabian Peninsula—existed. It is also very likely that they interacted with Arabs in a range of commercial and social contexts. Rabbinic literature recounts interactions with both named and anonymous Arabs, reflects on the relative morality and righteousness of Arabs, and contains biblical exegeses linking Arabs to biblical Ishmael, their progenitor according to rabbinic tradition. The rabbis’ depiction of Arabs is complex and multivalent. As with rabbinic discussions of many Others, some of the depictions are flattering, but many are not. Arabs are often depicted as sources of what the rabbis would describe as primitive folk wisdom, possessing knowledge that is subordinated to and appropriated by the rabbinic movement. In other instances, Arabs serve as a foil for rabbinic superiority as negative examples of behavior, knowledge, or relationship to God.

The rabbis use three distinct terms to refer to Arabs. The first is Ishmaelites, which appears primarily but not exclusively in discussions linking Arabs to the biblical Ishmael. The second term is Tayaye, originally exemplified by the Tayyi tribe of the western Sasanian Empire, which was used across religious communities in late antiquity to refer to nomadic Arab communities and individuals. The third term is Arab, which was used primarily to refer to sedentary Arab communities. Even with this linguistic specificity, the modern reader must be careful to recognize that, while the rabbinic discussions of Arabs may well contain information about the realities of Arab life in late antiquity, these descriptions are always part of a larger rabbinic project. The information is shaped in particular ways to meet late antique rabbinic pedagogical, religious, and social goals.

Related Primary Sources

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God Regrets Creating Ishmael

y. Ta‘aniyot 3:4, 15a

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R. Joshua ben Yair [said] in the name of R. Pinḥas ben Yair: There are three [things] that the Holy One created, and regrets that He created: the Chaldeans, the Ishmaelites, and the evil inclination…

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Robbery as the Essence of Ishmael

Sifre Deuteronomy 343

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Another thing: And he said, The Lord came from Sinai (Deuteronomy 33:2). When the Holy One revealed Himself to give the Torah to Israel, He revealed Himself not in one language but in four languages.…

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Babylonian Rabbinic Descriptions of Arab Life

b. Shabbat 155b|b. Mo‘ed Katan 24a|b. Yevamot 71a|b. Bava Metsi‘a 86b|b. Berakhot 56b

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What does it mean [when the Mishnah states that] one may not force-feed [a camel on the Sabbath]? R. Judah said: One may not [feed it until it] creates a manger…

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An Arab Medical Expert

b. Avodah Zarah 29a
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R. Joshua b. Levi said: We [are permitted to] lift up the unklai on the Sabbath. What is the unklai? R. Abba said: [The unklai is] the cartilage around the heart [i.e., the stomach, perhaps]. What is…

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An Arab Guide

b. Bava Batra 73b–74a
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And Rabbah bar Bar Ḥanah said: Once we were traveling in the desert and we were accompanied by a certain Arab who would take dust and smell it and say, “This is the road to such and such a place, and…

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Arab Promiscuity

b. Kiddushin 49b|b. Avodah Zarah 22b
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Ten kabs [a measure] of wisdom came down into the world; the land of Israel took nine, and the rest of the world one. Ten kabs of beauty came down into the…