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Lehi's
Trail and Nahom Revisited
Based
on research by Warren P. and Michaela J. Aston, Stephen D. Ricks,
and John W. Welch.
Going well beyond
what one could safely say about the Arabian peninsula in 1829, Joseph
Smith's translation of the Book of Mormon included several details
about Lehi's route through the desert. The text mentions a place
"which was called Nahom," and it makes the astonishing claim that
somewhere along the southern coast of Arabia, one can find a fruitful
and bounteous haven with trees, garden spots, and honey. Such claims
can now be checked better than ever before.
In 1976, Lynn
M. and Hope Hilton traveled though Arabia and published an illustrated
report in which they proposed that the place called Nahom, where
Ishmael died and was buried, was around Al Kunfidah near the Red
Sea coast of Saudi Arabia.1 Ross T. Christensen soon
suggested an alternative location for Nahom, based upon a map of
Yemen prepared as a result of a 1762-64 exploration by Carsten Niebuhr
for Danish King Frederick V.2 To investigate these competing
claims, Warren P. and Michaela J. Aston of Australia visited Yemen
in November 1984, searching for additional evidence concerning Nahom
and the route taken by Lehi and his party.
The Astons located
a 1976 map at the University of Sana'a in the Yemen Arab Republic
that showed "Nehem" located some thirty-five miles northeast of
Sana'a (further south than the site proposed by the Hiltons). This
appeared to be the same region Niebuhr listed as "Nehm." Moreover,
the Nahm or Naham tribe has existed in the area since at least the
tenth century A. D. If further work supports their tentative findings
associating "Nehem" with the Book of Mormon "Nahom," several details
of Lehi's route will need to be reassessed. In particular, the identification
of the land of Bountiful on the southern coast of the Arabian peninsula,
from which the group set sail for the New World, probably needs
to be moved westward from Salalah, the site proposed by the Hiltons
(which also happens to keep it in the proper relationship "nearly
eastward" [1 Nephi 17:1] with Nahom).
There are two
Semitic language roots suggested by the Book of Mormon Nahom. Either
or both may stand behind the name Nahom in 1 Nephi 16. In 1950,
Hugh Nibley noted that the name Nahom must come from a Semitic language
root signifying lamenting and grieving (in Arabic as nahama,
"sigh, groan, moan, especially with another").3 In Hebrew,
the root nhm is often used for "mourning" someone else's
death or "consoling " the bereaved (Genesis 37:35; 38:12, 50:21;
2 Samuel 10:2-3; Isaiah 22:4; 51:19; Jeremiah 16:7).4 Since
the Astons found that a large zone of ancient tombs extends over
many miles within the region of Nehem in Yemen, this could indicate
the longtime use of this area as a burial ground, possibly making
a name signifying "grieving" highly appropriate, if only as a play
on similar roots.
The name of
the area in Yemen now mapped as "nehem" is pronounce by local inhabitants
Nää-hum, derived from the Arabic root nhm, whose
basic meaning is "growl, groan, roar, suffer from hunger, complain."
The same root is found in biblical Hebrew (see Isaiah 5:29-30; Hosea
2:23) and in ancient Egyptian (nhm, "thunder, shout"; nhmhm,
"roar, thunder"). Thus a ritual concomitant of mourning (groaning)
is also associated with this root, as well as the sense of suffering
from hunger, which is equally apt in the context of 1 Nephi 16:35,
which reports much complaining, suffering, and hunger.
The Astons further
found that current scholars plot out more complicated trail system
for the frankincense trade than was thought a decade ago. Those
trails came farther south along the Read Sea coast before branching
off eastward than the Hiltons' sources showed. And instead of there
being only a single area, Dhofar (Zufar), producing frankincense,
it now appears that an area some five hundred miles long along the
south coast of the Arabian peninsula produced this precious substance.5
It was shipped from the eastern areas (including the Salalah
area favored by the Hiltons for Bountiful) in coastal vessels to
Qana, thence northward along the trail toward the consuming centers
in the Near East. Theses facts make it less likely than had appeared
that Lehi's party would have reached the sea as far east as Salalah.
Instead, Lehi's
group may have ended its desert journey between Salalah and the
coastal Hadramawt area of modern South Yemen. In that region, William
Hamblin has found pre-Islamic traditions about a prophet named Hud,
whose tomb is located near the border between Oman and South Yemen.6
Like Lehi, Hud reputedly prophesied against certain idol worshippers
who were "renowned for their elaborate buildings" (compare 1 Nephi
8:26), was rejected because of the pride of the people (compare
1 Nephi 8:27), but escaped while the wicked were destrowyed.7
While probably not closely connected, Lehi and Hud seem to have
been kindred spirits.
For centuries,
the sands have blown across Lehi's trail. Perhaps additional clues
yet remain about where Lehi's group might have traveled.
Notes
1. Lynn M. and
Hope Hilton, In Search of Lehi's trail (Salt Lake City:
Deseret Book, 1976), 94; also published in Ensign 6 (September
1976): 33-54 and (October 1976): 64-63.
2. Ross T. Christensen,
"Comment: The Place Called Nahom," Ensign 9 (August 1978):
73.
3. Hugh Nibley,
"Lehi in the Desert," Improvement Era 53 (June 1950): 517.
See Lehi in the Desert and the World of the Jaredites (Salt
Lake City: Bookcraft, 1952), 90-91; in The Collected Works of
Hugh Nibley (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1988),
5:79.
4. See H. Van
Dyke Parunak, "A Semantic Survey of NHM," Biblica
56 (1975): 512-32, who compares Ugaritic nhm "console."
5. Nigel Groom,
Frankincense and Myrrh: A Study of the Arabian Incense Trade
(London: Longman Group, 1981). See also Thomas J. Abercrombie, "Arabia's
Frankincense Trail," National Geographic 168 (October 1985):
474-512.
6. William Hamblin,
"Pre-Islamic Arabian Prophets," in Spencer Palmer, ed., Mormons
and Muslims (Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center, 1983), 87-89.
7. See Qur'an
7:65-72; 11:50-60; 26:123-40.
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