Why is ISIS destroying ancient artifacts in Iraq?
The Islamic State–aka ISIS–continues its campaign of violence, this time attacking history itself.
A video that surfaced recently purportedly shows members of the radical group taking sledgehammers, pickaxes, and even jackhammers to the ancient artifacts housed within the Mosul Museum in northern Iraq.
“The Prophet Muhammad commanded us to shatter and destroy statues,” a bearded man in a white shirt and black kufi* says in Arabic.
*kufi--A kufi or kufi cap is a brimless, short, and rounded cap worn by men in many populations in North Africa, East Africa, Western Africa and Asia.
“This is what his companions did later on, when they conquered lands.”
“Since Allah commanded us to shatter and destroy these statues, idols and remains, it is easy for us to obey… even if this costs billions of dollars,” the man says.
A camera captures a series of scenes showing statues–some reportedly more than 3,000 years old–being reduced to rubble.
Militants can be seen knocking down icons and destroying idols that date back to the Assyrian Empire, which ruled a large chunk of what is now the Middle East from 2500 BC to about 600 BC.
The destruction at the Mosul Museum is only the latest of the Islamic State’s efforts to eradicate any hint of Iraq’s non-Muslim culture, as the militant group strives to reform the region into a single, homogenous caliphate* under its control.
*A caliphate is a form of Islamic government led by a caliph—a person considered a political and religious successor to the prophet Muhammad and a leader of the entire Muslim community.
Part of that effort requires a rewriting of history: Earlier this week, news outlets reported that ISIS ransacked and burned the Mosul Public Library, destroying more than 8,000 ancient and rare books and manuscripts.
Remember when Iraqis destroyed irreplaceable artifacts and the moron Rumsfield commented, it's a free country, they can do as they please. Wonder how they're enjoying their "freedom" since being "liberated."
“This destruction marks a new phase in the cultural cleansing perpetrated in regions controlled by armed extremists in Iraq,” Irina Bokova, director-general of the UN’s Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, said in a statement Tuesday.
“It adds to the systematic destruction of heritage and the persecution of minorities that seeks to wipe out the cultural diversity that is the soul of the Iraqi people.”
The tactic is unofficially called “cultural genocide,” a term that David Nersessian, assistant dean of global programs at Boston University School of Management, has used to describe attacks on an ethnic or religious group's wider institutions--including its languages, traditional practices and ways, religious institutions and objects, and clergy members, academics, and intellectuals.
The UN’s “Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples" validates the rights of any group to maintain, observe, and protect its culture and traditions.
But any human rights treaty depends on the goodwill of participating states. Those most likely to commit cultural genocide are least likely to participate in any voluntary human rights program.
Regrettably, the destruction and looting of art during times of war goes back to Greek and Roman times.
More recently, during World War II, Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin each envisioned a “super museum” that would showcase all of Europe’s great works of art, Matthew Steen wrote in an article titled, "Collateral Damage: The Destruction and Looting of Cultural Property in Armed Conflict."
The result, Mr. Steen wrote, was that the two sides spent the war “looting, plundering, and destroying each others cultural property from private and public collections.”
The same could be said of the warring sides of the brutal conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina in the 1990s, according to a Harvard University expert on the region’s cultural heritage.
He wrote that while three years of war in Bosnia resulted in more than 4 million refugees and 200,000 dead, "the cultural casualties were no less staggering."
More than one thousand of Bosnia’s mosques, hundreds of Catholic churches and scores of Orthodox churches, monasteries, private and public libraries, archives, and museums were shelled, burned, and dynamited, and in many cases even the ruins were removed by nationalist extremists in order to complete the cultural and religious “cleansing” of the land they had seized.
It happened again in Afghanistan in 2001, when the Taliban set about destroying thousands of ancient Buddist statues across the country; Al-Qaeda militants also torched a library full of historic manuscripts as they fled Timbuktu, Mali, in 2013.
Attacking a people’s cultural works can be tantamount to attacking its very identity.
As The Christian Science Monitor reported after the destruction of the Mosul library, the pain felt by Iraqis at the destruction of a national treasure is palpable.
"What a pity!" said one who left Mosul to exile years ago. "We used to go to the library in the 1970s.
It was one of the greatest landmarks of Mosul."
Added an activist and a blogger from Mosul, “Nine hundred years ago, the books of the Arab philosopher Averroes were collected before his eyes...and burned.
<< Home