MUSEUM-L Archives

Museum discussion list

MUSEUM-L@HOME.EASE.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
CulPropProtNet/MusSecNetwork <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 4 Oct 2004 06:03:12 +0200
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (238 lines)
Selected reports October 4, 2004
___________________________________________________

- Give back looted treasures, Ethiopia tells the world

- Jordanian customs officials have seized six ancient Iraqi artefacts
believed to have been stolen from Iraqi museums

____________________________________________________


Give back looted treasures, Ethiopia tells the world
After decades of political wrangling, Italy agreed to return the Rome
Obelisk to its home. Now Addis Ababa wants Britain to send back its ancient
relics, including some held by the Queen, writes Meera Selva
04 October 2004


Wander around Axum, a sleepy town in northern Ethiopia, and it is impossible
to ignore the giant pit that has been dug right in the centre of town. It is
to be filled with the Rome Obelisk, a 1,700-year-old carved granite stone
that was hauled away by the Italians in 1937 during Mussolini's brutal
occupation of the country.

Sipping macchiato made from an imported Italian coffee machine, 24-year-old
Akul explains just why the stone should be returned. "It is our history and
we are proud of it. They [the Italians] cannot be proud of their history in
this country so they have no right to keep it."

Akul and others like him have found an unexpected champion in their fight to
have their antiques returned.

Professor Richard Pankhurst, son of Sylvia, grandson of Emmeline and nephew
of Christabel, the trio of suffragettes who won for women the right to vote
in the UK, has taken up the Ethiopian cause.

Sitting in the study of his home in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia's capital,
surrounded by grandchildren, he talks of how important it is that Europe
returns the treasures it stole from the African country. "The youth of this
country deserve to see the treasures produced by their ancestors," he said.
"It is very important for them to feel a sense of pride in their country,
and to know that they are from a civilisation that produced great things."

Professor Pankhurst, 77, and his family are almost Ethiopian treasure in
themselves. His mother's tomb was given pride of place at the front of the
Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Adaba. She was one of the few Westerners to
notice and oppose Italy's occupation of Ethiopia. People in Addis still
remember how she fought for Ethiopian independence, and eventually moved to
the country to edit a newspaper. In many ways, the country suited her
perfectly.

Except for the Italian invasion, which lasted from 1935 to 1941, the country
had never been colonised, and the status of women in Ethiopia was in many
ways better than it was in England. Women could own property and keep their
own name after marriage long before they were given the same rights in
England.

After she died, in Ethiopia, in 1960, Professor Pankhurst took up her
mantle. In 1962, he set up an Institute for Ethiopian studies in the grounds
of Addis Adaba University. He left the country in 1976, just after the
socialist dictatorship, known as the Derg, took power, but later returned
and settled in Addis. He is currently research professor at the institute.

His son, Alula, named after an Ethiopian patriot, teaches social
anthropology at the university, and his daughter, Helen, who kept the
Pankhurst name after she married, has brought her children to Ethiopia for a
year to teach them Amharic, the country's main language. Every taxi driver
in the capital knows the way to the Pankhurst house and every tour guide
around the country claims to be Professor Pankhurst's closest friend.

"He is a very good man - he always talks well about Ethiopia abroad, which
is why foreigners come to see us," said Menelik as he unlocked the door to
King Ezana's stela, a fourth-century stone in Axum that has inscriptions in
the ancient languages of Sabaean, Ge'ez and Greek.

"Without him, everyone thinks we are people of only famine and war."

Ethiopia is one of the growing number of countries that are demanding the
return of antiques that were taken away by Western colonial powers.

Like the Elgin Marbles, the Rome Obelisk has become a symbol of the wrongs
inflicted on a developing country by a First World power.

Ethiopia has struggled to build up a tourism industry in the wake of Live
Aid and other famine appeals, which destroyed its image abroad, and sees the
return of its antiquities as a crucial part of an economic and political
recovery.

"We need all the help we can get to rebuild tourism," Mulugetu Assefe, head
of the Lalibela branch of National Tour Operators, said. "Our hotels and
transport are not always reliable, but if we get these treasures back, we
believe the stream of tourists that will come will help us improve
standards." After decades of political wrangling, Italy agreed last year to
return the Rome obelisk to Ethiopia, but so far, no one has found a way to
get the 100 ton structure back to its original site in northern Ethiopia. It
was taken away by sea at the port of Massawa but that port is now part of
Eritrea, which refuses to help Ethiopia until a border dispute between the
two countries is resolved.

Despite the deadlock over the obelisk, Professor Pankhurst is determined to
secure the return of the Maqdala Treasures, a collection of precious
manuscripts and artefacts that was stolen by the British, who invaded the
mountain city of Maqdala in 1868. The Ethiopian ruler Emperor Tewodros
committed suicide after the defeat and the British loaded up 15 elephants
and 200 mules with the looted goods and carried them home, where they were
auctioned off to raise money for British troops.

The collection, believed to be worth $3bn (£1.7bn), is scattered around
various houses and institutions including the British Library, the Royal
Library at Windsor Castle, and the Cambridge University Library.

Tourists and rogue antique dealers still try to smuggle artefacts out of the
country and the World Bank now plans to set up a catalogue of all remaining
artefacts in Ethiopia, to stop them also being taken out of the country
illegally.

Some of the looted art has made its way back in dribs and drabs. Reverend
John Luckie discovered a tabot, a wooden replica of the Arc of the Covenant
- used by Israelites to carry the Ten Commandments to the Promised Land -
that is found in all Ethiopian Orthodox churches, in a battered leather box
in an Edinburgh church, and returned it to Ethiopia in 2002. More than a
thousand Ethiopians lined the route from Addis Ababa's airport to the
university to welcome it home.

The most recent return was in May, when a Danish professor, Fiona Wilson,
returned a buffalo skin and silver shield belonging to Emperor Tewodro,
which had hung in her parents' dining room during her childhood. Her
grandfather had bought the shield from a dealer in 1890, and her family had
assumed it was a Scottish antique. The shield has now become the single most
visited item in Ethiopia.

Despite these small victories, Ethiopian academics want artefacts to be
returned in a systematic way so they can build up a comprehensive
collection, that they then promise will be available to academics around the
world.

This week, the Ethiopian parliament will make a formal request to the
British Government to return the Maqdala treasures. "Individuals have
returned antiques promptly but I just wish the Queen could be as generous in
returning the six precious manuscripts she holds at Windsor Castle," said
the professor. "It is part of her private collection and there is nothing to
stop her returning them."

The main obstacle faced by Professor Pankhurst is a belief that Ethiopia
will not be able to care for the antiques properly. Indeed attitudes towards
precious artefacts can seem somewhat cavalier in Ethiopia.

A manuscript made of goat skin that dates from the 16th century is left open
on an office chair inside one of Lalibela's 900-year-old rock churches and
others are left out in the sunlight for tourists to photograph. And
centuries-old bronze artefacts are casually dragged out by priests from
under wooden benches to be photographed by visitors. In Axum, local women
collect murky green water to wash their clothes from a square pool which is
believed to be baths used by the Queen of Sheba. Professor Pankhurst accepts
this is a problem. "We will have to hold workshops for priests, teaching
them how to store and handle ancient manuscripts properly," he admits. "But
I would like to point out that the obelisks that remain in Axum are still
intact, while the one in Rome has had its surface eroded by Roman pollution.
It's simply not true that things will be better cared for in the West.
Remember the fire at Windsor Castle? It could very well have destroyed our
manuscripts."

He adds that the antiques that remained in Ethiopia survived all the
country's political turmoils, including the overthrow of Emperor Haile
Selassie in 1974, and the war against Eritrea in 1998. "Everyone in Ethiopia
recognises the value of the possessions we have. Even during the 1974
revolution, army generals took personal responsibility for the safety of
even the smallest item of any historic significance."

The British Library tried last month to offer a compromise solution. It
refused to return the 10 tabots it holds, but offered to give access to
Ethiopian priests in London who wanted to view them. It adds that it wants
to preserve its collections "for the benefit of international scholarship
and the enjoyment of the public". Historians argue that the tabots are
religious objects that are meaningless outside a church. Professor Andreas
Eshete, president of Addis Ababa University, said: "The tabots give a church
its sanctity, and they only have a value if they are accompanied by a
congregation and prayers. And if scholars are really interested in Ethiopian
history, they surely cannot object to travelling to Ethiopia to see
manuscripts in the country where they belong."

In September, Professor Pankhurst organised protests outside the Italian
embassy in London. Afromet, the organisation he founded to lobby for the
return of the Maqdala treasures, will target Britain's Commission on Africa,
which meets in Addis Ababa under the chairmanship of Tony Blair on Thursday
and Friday. It wants to take advantage of the fact that the commission has
called for 'the preservation of African culture and heritage". Other African
countries, including Ghana, Nigeria and Zimbabwe, want their treasures back.

"Tony Blair tells us he wants us to maintain our culture," said Professor
Eshete. "Well perhaps the best way to encourage us is to give us back all
our treasures. Ethiopia's heritage is Africa's heritage." 


http://news.independent.co.uk/

______________________________________________


Six Iraqi artefacts retrieved
Sunday 03 October 2004, 23:00 Makka Time, 20:00 GMT    
 
15,000 artefacts are still missing from Iraqi museums
 
Jordanian customs officials have seized six ancient Iraqi artefacts believed
to have been stolen from Iraqi museums at the Karama border post , customs
chief Mahmud Qteishat. 

Qteishat told the Petra news agency that the antiquities dated to 1500 BCE
and were found hidden in a car driven by an Iraqi man as he tried to enter
Jordan on Saturday.

Some of the objects had metal identification plates and could have been
stolen from Iraqi museums, Qteishat said on Sunday.

According to Petra, the seized objects included a winged bull and a
half-man, half-lion statue.

Iraq Museum director Donny George told AFP in June that some 15,000
artefacts stolen from the museum were still missing. The museum, as well as
Iraqi archeological sites, were looted after last year's US-led invasion.

Jordanian authorities say more than 1500 pieces of antiquities have been
seized at the country's border with Iraq and they are being kept for
safekeeping. 


http://english.aljazeera.net/

____________________________________________________

=========================================================
Important Subscriber Information:

The Museum-L FAQ file is located at http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "help" (without the quotes).

If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "Signoff Museum-L" (without the quotes).

ATOM RSS1 RSS2