Authorities recover some looted artefacts
- Finnish authorities seized a looted Ottoman-era artefact from Syria destined for Russia (June 5 2015). See the IB Times report here.
- The BBC reports on June 5 2015 that the British Museum is safeguarding a looted Syrian artefact (no details provided) and hopes to return it to the country in the future here.
- A consideration of ISIS’ motivations for destroying heritage can be found in the June edition of the New York Review of Books here.
- Xinhua reports on items recovered by Syrian authorities (May 27 2015) here.
- The Financial Times on May 23 2015 asks if we should “rethink our ideas about preserving world heritage”.
- PBS reports on “How war has robbed Syria of its history” on May 19 2015.
|
|
|
Looting anticipated in Palmyra
Buzzfeed (May 21 2015) reports that smugglers anticipate “good business” from Palmyra. See details here. |
|
|
Species of Ibis in Syria threatened by conflict
The BBC reports on May 24 2015 that the Syrian conflict is threatening the survival of the Northern Bald Ibis, close to Palmyra. See the full report here. |
|
|
Syrian art exhibition opens in Amsterdam
The first Syrian modern art exhibition in the Netherlands opened May 29 and will run until June 21. It features the modern art of Syrian diaspora artists. It is being held at ABC Treehouse Voetboogstraat, Amsterdam. See more, covered from Versal journal, here. |
|
|
Reports and Updates from the Syrian Directorate General of Antiquities and Museums |
|
|
DGAM updates on Palmyra
DGAM has posted regular updates concerning the situation in Palmyra:
- The DGAM announced “cooperation initiatives” with the people of Palmyra/Tadmur on June 1 2015, drawing on close connections between the local community and the archaeological site here.
- DGAM posted a brief that the Palmyra site is in danger (May 21 2015) here, as well as a statement that the artefacts have been moved to a safe location here.
- Before the ISIS capture, DGAM reported that steps have been taken to remove valuable objects to remote locations and to reinforce/bury some structures here (May 16 2015). Additionally, a statement from the Director-General was posted the same day here.
|
|
|
DGAM sponsors educational events
- The DGAM is participating in a 10-day course in Beirut, “First Aid to Cultural Built Heritage in Syria”, which began on June 1 2015. For details, see here.
- The DGAM held a conference between May 20 and 21 at the Damascus Museum, examining the government’s response to the heritage crisis in Syria. See here for details.
|
|
|
Policy Changes and Updates from Syria |
|
|
Countries working to protect Syrian heritage
- US Congress bans sale of looted Syrian artefacts June 1 2015. See the report from Al Monitor here or US News here. Additionally, Katharyn Hanson’s testimony to the House Foreign Affairs Committee can be found on video here.
- The anti-IS coalition meeting in Paris on June 2 2015, discussed, among other strategies, the protection of cultural heritage, reports the BBC on June 2 here.
- Further coverage of the “Cairo Declaration”, intended to stop trade in “blood antiquities” can be found from Al-Ahram (May 21 2015) here.
- UNESCO praises countries engaged in “the prohibition of cross-border trade of cultural objects from Syria and Iraq” here.
- New exhibit opens at the Oriental Institute, Chicago, from May 21 2015: “A Threatened Heritage”, an exhibit “made up of a series of graphic panels interspersed throughout [the] permanent galleries, with a focus on Mesopotamia (Iraq and Syria), the Southern Levant, Egypt, and Nubia.” For further details. see here.
|
|
|
UNESCO continues efforts to protect Syrian heritage
- UNESCO has provided a visual representation of its efforts to safeguard Syrian heritage via the Emergency Safeguarding of the Syrian Cultural Heritage project: on May 27 2015 here.
- UNESCO calls for immediate end to fighting in and around Palmyra on May 20 2015 here.
- UN efforts alone are insufficient to halt antiquities smuggling, according to interviews of UNESCO experts in the Middle East Eye (June 4 2014) here.
|
|
|
News Updates
(Not covered in other sections) |
|
|
Looting and destruction Syria’s heritage in the news
- The Telegraph reports on efforts by ‘digital monuments men’ to curb the trade in illegal artefacts (June 6 2015).
- National Geographic (June 4 2015) reports on local efforts to guard the site of Urkesh in northern Syria here.
- There is ‘Method to ISIL’s vandalism madness’, reports 9News (Australia) on June 3 2015.
- FP argues (June 2 2015) that defeating IS and stopping its looting of heritage are two sides of the same coin. The article addresses the question of whether efforts should focus on protecting people or protecting artefacts:
“The focus is, as it must be, on the human tragedy. But mourning these attacks against heritage does not change that focus. As devastating as this destruction is, history warns us that worse is coming. Once you erase a people’s historical identity, the next step is to erase the people themselves.”
See the full article here.
- The Telegraph reports that IS sets up ‘ministry of antiquities’
(May 30 2015).
- The Washington Post discusses why IS’ attack on heritage matters (May 29 2015) here.
- The Times of Israel reports on May 29 2015 that Syria is not included in a new UN General Assembly resolution designed to protect cultural heritage from IS, blaming political wrangling. For further details, see here.
- FP reports on how IS sells its looted artefacts (May 28 2015) here.
- The National reports on a group called the “Committee for Shared Culture” on May 28 2015, which it terms “a secretive organisation”. See the article here.
-
ASOR has a general news aggregate page that can be found here,
|
|
|
|
|
|