Amid Iraq’s Carnage
By Hadani Ditmars
Amid Iraq’s carnage, preserving its ancient World Heritage
sites may offer a glimmer of hope
And so the latest in the surrealist horror show that the
nightly news on Iraq has become, offers a rich narrative mine, at least for a
writer working on a political travelogue of ancient sites. Once again, the
Mongol hordes are at the gates.
After destroying statues of a poet and a musician in Mosul,
ISIS now threatens to destroy the 2nd century BC city of Hatra, and UNESCO has
sounded the alarm about one of their World Heritage sites at risk.
The Director-General of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, said earlier
this week: “I call on all actors to refrain from any form of destruction of
cultural heritage, including religious sites. Their [acts of] intentional
destruction are war crimes and a blow against the Iraqi people’s identity and
history.”
In one of many ironies, this well preserved example of a
Parthian city that has survived centuries of imperial intrigue and invasions
may fall victim to a group of angry – yet well-organized and well-funded –
young men, drunk on brutality, wired on ideology run amok, galvanized by
decades of war and injustice.
Hatra has more recently served as a film set for the 1973
production of “The Exorcist,” in which a priest discovers a talisman belonging
to an ancient demon and brings it back to the US, where it possesses a young
American girl.
While it’s not difficult to ascertain that the disastrous
invasion of 2003 has unleashed more than its fair share of vindictive spirits
of which ISIS is only one – Iraq’s ancient sites, like its people – have been
long-suffering.
Iraq’s monuments bear witness to and share in the hardships
of her people. After years of war and occupation, historic sites have been
badly damaged and neglected. While the Taliban’s destruction of the Buddhas of
Bamyan in Afghanistan was universally condemned, outrage about the destruction
of Iraqi and indeed world heritage (not to mention the fate of Iraq’s people)
has been somewhat restrained.
As Muwafaq al Taei - who was an architect under Saddam but
an unrepentant Communist who was simultaneously lionized and spied upon by the
old regime and then almost killed by US troops after the invasion - (and my
erstwhile travel companion on my journey to Iraq’s ancient sites) always says,
“You have to understand the past to make sense of the present."
I was inspired to write my next book, “Ancient Heart,” when
Muafaq took me on a tour of sacred sites in Baghdad, in the midst of sectarian
war zones, garbage dumps and displaced people's camps. It reminded me of the
last scene in “Planet of the Apes,” when Charlton Heston sees the Statue of
Liberty half-submerged on the beach.
As I write this, I am looking at a map of ancient sites in
Iraq. Most maps of Iraq in the popular imagination are divided into three neat
sectarian sections, or filled with bullet point punctuations on the evening
news.
But I am convinced of the power of this map. If applied
correctly, it may just transform people's consciousness. I want people –
whether American generals or ISIS commanders – to see Iraq for what it is, to
recognize the depth and soul of the land they invaded, not just as another
terrorized place to be abandoned but as part of our world heritage.
My map shows Ur, the birthplace of the Prophet Abraham and
the home of the Sumerian ziggurat. Saddam stationed a military base nearby, as
did the invading Americans who added a strategically placed Burger King. It was
once a temple to the moon god Nanna, and many moons later, its adjoining town
of Nasiriyah site of the Shiah uprising, encouraged by George Bush Snr and then
brutally repressed by the regime, while the US stood by.
Here the Iraqi Communist Party was founded in 1932, and an
important Jewish community existed until 1951. Fierce battles took place during
the 2003 invasion and Nasiriyah’s 15 minutes of fame occurred when US private
Jessica Lynch became a POW there. No-one mentioned the ruins.
Or consider Kirkuk, for example, which stands on the site of
the ancient Assyrian capital of Arrapha, located near the Khasa River on the
ruins of a 5,000-year-old settlement (the Kirkuk Citadel). Arrapha was an
important city under the Assyrians in the 10th and 11th centuries BC, and
because of its strategic geographical location, it became the battle ground for
three empires— Assyria, Babylonia and Media.
Today, Kirkuk (with ISIS at the gates) is a tinderbox of
sectarian conflict as Kurds, Arabs and Turkomans duke it out for control of the
city and its vast oil resources. In 1997, there were reports that the government
of Saddam Hussein damaged Kirkuk's historic citadel with its mosques and
ancient church. The architectural heritage of Kirkuk also sustained serious
damage during World War I (when some pre-Islamic Christian monuments were
destroyed) and, more recently, during the Anglo-American invasion and
occupation. By June 2007, 18 ancient shrines had been lost in and around
Kirkuk.
Baghdad's al-Safafeer Souq bazaar |
My map also shows the ancient site of Babylon –
reconstructed in Saddam’s own image (quite literally, with his name stamped
onto bricks and his likeness in murals depicting him as a neo-Nebuchadnezzar),
then damaged and severely contaminated by US-led forces post-invasion, when
they turned the site into a military depot. Today, Babylon boasts an oil
pipeline and a displaced persons camp.
But there is also a shrine there to one of the sons of Imam
Ali. The local women come to pray here for fertility, because underneath the
Islamic shrine lies another to Marduk, the supreme god of Babylon. Iraqis of
all faiths still wear his likeness as talismans/pendants and even pray to him
for intercession.
And so Iraq, where language and architecture were invented,
and a robust modern culture flourished and still struggles to survive, is now a
country of widows and orphans, of angry young men and their rival militias. But
its ancient sites, who have witnessed so many empires come and go, should unite
Iraqis in their moment of crisis, not divide them.
They are a reminder that long before the British or the
Americans, long before ISIS or the Baath party, there was Uruk. Before there
were Muslims or Christians, Sunni or Shi’a, Arabs or Kurds, there was
Mesopotamia. And there is a power in that; and, as I wish with all my heart, a
glimmer of hope amid the madness.
Hadani Ditmars for RT
Hadani Ditmars is the author of Dancing in the No-Fly Zone:
a Woman's Journey Through Iraq, a past editor at New Internationalist, and has
been reporting from the Middle East for two decades.
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