Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Cultural heritage and violence in the Middle East

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Cultural heritage and violence in the Middle East

    Open Democracy
    Oct 4 2014

    Cultural heritage and violence in the Middle East


    Fiona Rose-Greenland 4 October 2014

    When people are dying in their thousands, why should we care about the
    destruction of artefacts? Cultural violence has long been a component
    in the obliteration of communities; it legitimates the denial of
    diversity and makes them much harder to rebuild.

    Theatres of erasure: Syria and Iraq

    The violence in Iraq has killed nearly 6,000 civilians since the start
    of 2014, according to the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq. In Syria,
    over 100,000 lives have been claimed and some two million persons
    displaced since the start of the civil war in March 2011.

    Media coverage has rightly focused on the human dimension of
    suffering. With this essay, however, we want to reflect upon another
    important aspect of the violence: the systematic destruction of
    cultural sites and objects.

    According to reports of the activist Facebook group Le patrimoine
    archéologique syrien en danger, all six UNESCO World Heritage sites in
    Syria have been damaged, major museum collections at Homs and Hama
    have been looted, and dozens of ancient tells have been obliterated by
    shelling.

    In Iraq, recent media stories recount ISIS fighters' use of
    antiquities to raise revenues. So-called blood antiquities function as
    cash-cows, fetching high prices from unscrupulous collectors and
    netting a handsome cut for ISIS.

    As devastating as this news is, Syria and Iraq are simply additional
    chapters in the long-running story wherein conflict is characterised
    by a two-fold assault on humanity: human bodies themselves as well as
    the objects and sites that people create and infuse with cultural
    meaning.

    Cultural violence is not a practice exclusive to Islamic groups or
    areas; rather, it is the nature of all radical ideologies, religious
    and national alike. They proceed with a predictable agenda: first to
    paint the world in black and white, and then to erase all shades of
    cultural practice from non-white to black.

    Before asking ourselves what steps should be taken to save artefacts,
    monuments, and antiquities in the Middle East, we need to understand
    why doing so matters. This requires an understanding of the broader
    historical pattern of organised cultural violence.

    Cultural violence and genocide: a 20th-century hate story

    The destruction of human communities is incomplete without cultural
    violence. This was the conclusion of lawyer and human rights advocate
    Raphael Lemkin, the Polish-born jurist who coined the term "genocide"
    and fought successfully for its recognition by international legal
    bodies as a crime. In Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (1944), he argued:

    By 'genocide' we mean the destruction of a nation or of an ethnic
    group...[It signifies] a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at
    the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national
    groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves. (Lemkin
    1944: 80)

    Among the "essential foundations" of the life of human societies,
    Lemkin argued, were cultural sites, objects, and practices. The
    Holocaust galvanised his human rights work, but it was the tragic case
    of Turkish Armenians during the beginning decades of the twentieth
    century that served as the basis for Lemkin's theory of genocide.

    Turkish Armenians were subject to organised murder and deportation
    under the Ottoman government, an event now widely acknowledged despite
    continued denials by Turkish officials. Current scholarly discussion
    on the Armenian genocide, however, focuses almost exclusively on the
    human destruction, not taking into consideration the systematic
    annihilation of Armenian sites and monuments that has taken place
    since then.

    Yet, the cultural destruction has been so extensive that few people in
    Turkey today even know that eastern Asia Minor was once the ancestral
    lands of Armenians; they do not because the Turkish state and its
    governments have systematically removed all markers of the Armenians'
    civilisation.

    Such cultural destruction occurred in stages. First, the potential of
    inherent threat was raised publicly to legitimate the forced removal
    of Armenian women, men, and children of the Ottoman Empire, plundering
    what they left behind and settling Muslim refugees in their houses.
    Then, all Armenian churches, schools and monasteries were confiscated
    and settled by either state officers or officials, or local Muslim
    notables.

    Since Asia Minor had been the ancestral lands of the Armenians for
    thousands of years, the churches and monasteries as well as their
    cemeteries were especially significant in documenting the course of
    human history. Those Armenian buildings not converted to mosques were
    torn down, used to store grain or shelter animals, or employed by the
    military for target practice.

    Also significant in this context was the systematic replacement of
    Armenian place names (on streets, buildings, neighbourhoods, towns,
    and villages) with Turkish names. The erasure of Armenians from
    collective memory was completed during the Turkish Republic; in their
    history textbooks, Turkish children hear nothing about Armenian
    culture or learn simply that they were enemies of the Turks.

    In sum, all cultural meaning that had emerged in the past and present
    was eliminated systematically blow by blow, leaving behind patterns of
    discrimination cut through with deep silences. This is cultural death,
    and it is especially dangerous because it legitimates the denial of
    diversity by authoritarian states and their societies.

    Cultural violence was not an Ottoman innovation. Historical records
    document previous erasures of peoples and their culture: the Native
    Americans and First Nations of north America; the Mayas and Aztecs of
    Mesoamerica; and the Roman destruction of Carthage (north Africa),
    which some scholars point to as the earliest recorded organised
    genocide.

    So what's new about the current spate of cultural violence in the
    Middle East? The Internet and new media are bringing new complexity to
    the pursuit of and resistance to cultural violence. We will wrap up
    our essay by turning our thoughts to new media's Janus-like ability to
    silence and amplify the experience of cultural violence.

    The perils and possibilities of new media

    The Facebook site we referred to in the opening of this essay is one
    of many new media efforts to draw attention to the destruction of
    historic sites, structures, and monuments in Syria.

    Complementary projects are underway in Egypt, where archaeologist Dr.
    Monica Hanna posts regular Tweets and Facebook posts about damage to
    Egyptian historic culture; and in Cambodia, where the Facebook page
    Heritage Watch--Cambodia is documenting in words and pictures looters'
    ransacking of ancient temples and illicit sales of Cambodian cultural
    artefacts.

    Are these efforts effective? If their primary objective is to make
    publicly available evidence of cultural violence, then yes - they have
    succeeded. Whether such efforts have actually curbed rates of cultural
    violence we cannot yet say. What we do know is that amplification
    threatens ruling powers.

    A case in point is the harrowing plight of Syrian journalist Ali
    Mahmoud Othman, co-founder of Le patrimoine archéologique syrien en
    danger. Othman was arrested by government forces in March 2012 and has
    not been heard of since his televised "confession" in May 2012. As of
    this writing, his supporters and loved ones continue to fear for his
    life.

    If you are an educated but non-specialist reader, the chances are that
    you know nothing of the Othman case but have heard a lot about James
    Foley, the American journalist murdered by ISIS last month. The flip
    side of new media, then, is that it has the power to direct our
    attention to particular cases or issues while ignoring others.

    Recurring Internet images of ISIS fighters beheading western men
    obscure the equally outrageous and horrific acts of sexual violence
    against women, torture of children, and destruction of homes, markets,
    churches, Shi'a mosques, and ancient monuments. All of this
    constitutes the challenging environment in which cultural activists
    must do their work.

    Moving ahead by preserving the past

    What should we make of it all? Human beings are suffering death,
    trauma, and displacement everyday in Syria and Iraq, but there remains
    a thorny question: Surely human suffering should be prioritised before
    cultural objects?

    The simple answer is yes; people come first, and the basic operational
    strategies of aid organisations and foreign governments - providing
    tents, food, medicine, and psychological support - should fill the
    convoys.

    However, ranking aid priorities from most to least urgent is
    complicated and short-sighted. Lemkin's teachings still have something
    to say to us today: without monuments and cultural objects, social
    groups are atomised into disaffected, soulless individuals.

    For this reason, the cultural environment deserves simultaneous close
    attention by policymakers and foreign governments and NGOs. When
    cultural violence is allowed to flourish the process of re-building
    human communities is difficult if not impossible.

    https://www.opendemocracy.net/arab-awakening/fiona-rosegreenland/cultural-heritage-and-violence-in-middle-east

Working...
X