Clinton Bailey, an American-Israeli educational whose analysis and documentation of the traditional traditions of the nomadic Bedouin tribes of the Center East helped protect a vanishing tradition for posterity, died on Jan. 5 at his residence in Jerusalem. He was 88.
The trigger was coronary heart failure, his son Michael mentioned.
A local of Buffalo, Dr. Bailey spent some 50 years recording the oral poetry, negotiations, trials, knowledge of the elders, weddings, rituals, proverbs and tales of the tribes of the southern Israeli Negev Desert and the Sinai Peninsula. Touring by Jeep to abandon Bedouin encampments, typically becoming a member of their migrations for weeks on camel again, digicam and tape recorder in hand, he created a file of a largely unwritten tradition.
The duty was pressing, he mentioned, as a result of Bedouin society, then largely illiterate, was on the cusp of speedy change. Fashionable borders, authorities restrictions and urbanization had been starting to encroach on their nomadic methods, and the appearance of transistor radios, automobiles and cellphones was sending the trendy world swooshing in.
“I made a decision to attempt to seize that tradition,” Dr. Bailey said in an interview in 2021 marking the donation of his archive of 350 hours of audio tape and a trove of prints and slides to the National Library of Israel. “I might already see it was starting to vanish.”
The library described his assortment in an announcement as “a treasure of orally transmitted historical tradition, now irreplaceable, and never accessible by way of the youthful generations of Bedouin who grew up uncovered to modernity.”
Dr. Bailey was revered by many tribespeople, who credit score him with preserving their historical traditions. Daham al-Atawneh, a retired writer from the Bedouin city of Hura within the Negev, mentioned Dr. Bailey had carried out “very sacred work,” significantly in amassing poetry.
“This preserves it for eternity,” he mentioned. “Possibly my youngsters will wish to return to their historical past in the future. There’s a file now.”
Dr. Bailey additionally advocated for the rights of the Bedouin who’ve been locked in an unresolved land dispute with the Israeli authorities for the reason that founding of the state. Few Bedouin had paperwork or deeds proving land possession.
Dr. Bailey’s life seems to have been largely formed by his curiosity and serendipitous encounters.
Born on April 24, 1936, as Erwin Glaser, he was the youthful son of Benjamin and Edna Glaser, Jewish immigrants from Russia. Benjamin Glaser, a self-made businessman, began out with a single fuel pump and ended up proudly owning a sequence of service stations in Buffalo.
Whereas serving within the U.S. Navy after the Korean Conflict, Erwin Glaser, whereas aboard a ship, met a rabbi who launched him to the Jewish literature of Japanese Europe. That led to a gathering in New York with Isaac Bashevis Singer, the Polish-born Jewish American author and Yiddishist who received the Nobel Prize in Literature.
After learning sculpture in Norway for a 12 months, Mr. Glaser returned to the US with the intention of learning Yiddish at Yeshiva College however ended up learning Hebrew in upstate New York. There he met his first Israeli, a member of a communal farm, or kibbutz. He moved to Israel in 1958, a decade after the institution of the Jewish state.
In 1959, he met after which married Maya Ordinan. Born in Czernowitz, now a part of Ukraine, she had come to Israel as a baby.
After incomes a bachelor’s diploma in political science and Center Japanese research from the Hebrew College of Jerusalem, he spent a 12 months in an Arab village within the Galilee hills, in northern Israel, instructing English and studying colloquial Arabic. He returned to the US and earned a doctorate in Center Japanese research at Columbia College earlier than returning to Israel in 1967.
Sooner or later within the Nineteen Sixties, he modified his identify to Clinton Bailey, drawn from the intersection of Clinton Avenue and Bailey Avenue in Buffalo, the positioning of considered one of his father’s service stations. The change was in preparation for a visit to Pakistan, his son Michael, mentioned, presumably to keep away from sounding Jewish in an Islamic nation, however, he added, the true causes had been by no means clear. Dr. Bailey was additionally recognized in Israel by his Hebrew identify Itzchak, or the nickname Itzik.
Jobless, and wandering round Tel Aviv in the future close to the house of David Ben-Gurion, the founding prime minister of Israel, Dr. Bailey ran into Paula Ben-Gurion, the chief’s partner. They bought to speaking, and he or she invited him in for tea.
That probability assembly led to a friendship with the Ben-Gurions that proved formative for Dr. Bailey. Mr. Ben-Gurion helped him safe a job instructing English at an academy at Sde Boker, a distant kibbutz within the Negev desert. The Ben-Gurions later retired to Sde Boker, the place they lived in a spacious however considerably spartan cabin. Dr. Bailey would typically be a part of the growing old politician on his brisk walks across the kibbutz.
When out jogging alone, he would encounter Bedouin shepherds and strike up conversations. They’d invite him again to their tents. He discovered their story — a life within the desert that harked again to pre-Biblical occasions — compelling. “It was a narrative of survival going again 4,500 years,” he mentioned.
After the 1967 conflict, with Israel in charge of the Egyptian Sinai, he gained entry to much more distant tribes. He moved to Jerusalem in 1975.
Within the Nineteen Eighties, as an adviser on Arab affairs in Israel’s Ministry of Protection, Dr. Bailey frequented southern Lebanon, the place Israel occupied a buffer zone. He centered on constructing relations with the Shiite Muslims there and really helpful that the Israeli authorities do the identical. However Israel as a substitute aligned itself with the Christian Lebanese militias that had been main the Lebanese authorities on the time.
The partnership with the Christian militias led to one of many darkest moments in Israeli historical past, when the nation was implicated within the massacres on the Palestinian refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila perpetrated by the Christian Phalange militia. Quickly Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shiite Lebanese militia, would emerge as a bitter enemy of Israel.
Dr. Bailey wrote 4 books on Bedouin poetry, proverbs, regulation and, most just lately, “Bedouin Tradition within the Bible,” printed by Yale College Press in 2018. He additionally taught Center East politics and Bedouin tradition for a few years at Trinity School in Hartford, Conn.
Along with Michael Bailey, he’s survived by his spouse and their three different sons, Daniel, Benjamin and Ariel, and 9 grandchildren.
In 2016, at age 80, Dr. Bailey discovered a brand new form of celeb. He had interviewed his buddy Mr. Ben-Gurion over three days in 1968 on movie, recording him speaking about his life and profession and the delivery of the Jewish state. The movie was then misplaced for many years and largely forgotten.
When it was rediscovered by chance — the silent movie in a single archive in Jerusalem, the soundtrack in one other within the Negev — it turned the idea for an acclaimed 2016 documentary, “Ben-Gurion, Epilogue.”
Within the interview, carried out 5 years earlier than his demise, Mr. Ben-Gurion supplied an unusually uncooked, contemplative evaluation of his life’s work. The documentary struck a chord in Israel, the place many individuals had been craving for extra humble leaders who confirmed extra statesmanship.
The simplicity of the Ben-Gurions’ cabin at Sde Boker was “an announcement,” Dr. Bailey instructed The New York Occasions on the time, including: “I don’t assume Ben-Gurion wished the perks of energy.”
The simplicity of desert life additionally drew Dr. Bailey to the Bedouin. In an effort to convey Bedouin methods to pals who had been used to a extra materials world, he would sometimes relate the story of how he had turned up unexpectedly to go to some tribesmen. Providing hospitality was a cultural crucial, so they’d procure some tea from right here and eggs from there till they had been capable of supply him a meal.
Though that they had little materials items themselves, the boys didn’t take into account this a hardship. “A Bedouin would get up within the morning with nothing,” Dr. Bailey mentioned, “and would take into account himself lucky if he had acquired one thing by bedtime.”