Subject: TR : Nabokov (1899-1977) burnt "El Quixote" in front of his
students. ...
Dear
Don (please post),
What
"expert" Báez says about my father is utter hogwash. He had best sit down
before he topples onto his left flank. Shame on the IPS for printing
undocumented disinformation.
Dmitri
Nabokov
-----Message
d'origine----- De : Sandy P. Klein [mailto:spklein52@hotmail.com]
Envoyé : mercredi, 16. février 2005 04:03 À :
spklein52@hotmail.com Objet : Nabokov (1899-1977) burnt "El
Quixote" in front of his students. ...
'Biggest Cultural Disaster Since
1258', Says Expert Inter Press Service (subscription), World -
5 hours ago ... Intellectuals have
burnt books in the name of the Bible or the Koran. VladimirNabokov (1899-1977) burnt "El Quixote" in front of his students.
...
IRAQ-US: 'Biggest Cultural Disaster Since 1258', Says
Expert Humberto Márquez CARACAS, Feb 15 (IPS) - One million books, 10
million documents and 14,000 archaeological artifacts have been lost in the
U.S.-led invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq -- the biggest cultural
disaster since the descendants of Genghis Khan destroyed Baghdad in 1258,
Venezuelan writer Fernando Báez told IPS.
"U.S. and Polish soldiers
are still stealing treasures today and selling them across the borders with
Jordan and Kuwait, where art merchants pay up to 57,000 dollars for a Sumerian
tablet," said Báez, who was interviewed during a brief visit to Caracas.
The expert on the destruction of libraries has helped document the
devastation of cultural and religious objects in Iraq, where the ancient
Mesopotamian kingdoms of Sumer, Akkad, and Babylon emerged, giving it a
reputation as the birthplace of civilisation.
His inventory of the
destruction and his denunciations that the coalition forces are violating the
Hague Convention of 1954 on the protection of cultural heritage in times of war
have earned him the enmity of Washington.
Báez said he was refused a
visa to enter the United States to take part in conferences.
In
addition, he has been barred from returning to Iraq "to carry out further
investigations," he added. "But it's too late, because we already have
documents, footage and photos that in time will serve as evidence of the
atrocities committed," said Báez, the author of "The Cultural Destruction of
Iraq" and "A Universal History of the Destruction of Books", which were
published in Spanish.
IPS: What do you accuse the United States of
doing?
FB: In first place, of violating the Hague Convention, which
states that cultural property must be protected in the event of armed conflict.
That is a criminally punishable offence, which is why Washington has not
signed the convention, or the 1999 protocol attached to it. And perhaps it is
one reason the administration of George W. Bush is seeking immunity for its
soldiers.
But it is not only the United States; the rest of the
coalition forces are also guilty.
IPS: But according to the reports, it
was Iraqi civilians and not U.S. soldiers who looted libraries and museums.
FB: But the U.S. army was criminally negligent, failing to protect
libraries, museums and archaeological sites despite clear warnings from UNESCO
(the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation), the U.N., the
University of Chicago's Oriental Institute and the former head of the U.S.
president's Advisory Committee on Cultural Property, Martin Sullivan.
The Iraqis who went out to loot interpreted the negligence as a green
light to act without restraint.
IPS: So the sin committed by the U.S.
was one of omission?
FB: Not only that. There was also direct
destruction and looting. In Nasiriya in May 2004, a year after the formal end of
hostilities, during fighting with (Shi'ite cleric) Muqtada el-Sadr's militants,
40,000 religious manuscripts were destroyed in a fire (set by the coalition
forces).
And when soldiers found out that the Sumerian city of Ur (in
southern Iraq) was the birthplace of the prophet Abraham, they took ancient
bricks as souvenirs.
IPS: You also accuse soldiers from other countries,
besides U.S. troops.
FB: That's right. In late May 2004, Italian
Carabinieri were caught trying to smuggle looted cultural artifacts over the
border into Kuwait. And the British Museum reported that Polish forces destroyed
part of Babylon's ancient ruins, to the south of Baghdad.
IPS: Can we
suppose that these events are part of phases of the conflict that have already
been left behind?
FB: No. More recently it was found that Polish troops
drove heavy vehicles near the Nebuchadnezzar Palace, which dates back to the
sixth century B.C., and then covered large areas of the site with asphalt, doing
irreparable damage. There were also attempts to gouge out bricks at the Gate of
Ishtar.
To that is added the collapse of ancient walls due to the
continuous passage of U.S. trucks and helicopters, and walls spraypainted with
graffiti, like "I was here" or "I love Mary".
IPS: Can we expect the
situation to improve with time?
FB: Another accusation that can be made
against the United States is that it has created a less safe country overall, by
generating the conditions for cultural destruction, which will be even worse in
future years, due to the situation of legal insecurity.
In the days of
the looting of Baghdad, U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld went so far as to
say that looting "isn't something that someone allows or doesn't allow. It's
something that happens."
Today Iraq is like a golf course for the
world's terrorists, and its cultural treasures will not be safe in the future.
IPS: What impact has there been on the United States?
FB: One of
its reactions was to rejoin UNESCO, which the U.S. had withdrawn from during the
era of (Ronald) Reagan (1981-1989) on the pretext that the U.N. agency served as
"a communist front".
Experts at the U.S. state and defence departments
are trying to mitigate the damages. U.S. military police helped Iraqi police
track down the Lady of Warka, dubbed the "Mona Lisa of Mesopotamia", a
5,200-year-old marble sculpture that is one of the earliest known
representations of the human face in the history of art.
IPS: How
significant are the losses?
FB: The Lady of Warka may be worth 100 or
150 million dollars. A Sumerian cuneiform tablet or an Assyrian stela can fetch
57,000 dollars at the border.
Some Iraqis have been purchasing books at
used-book markets in Baghdad to return them to the libraries.
But the
damage is incalculable. In the Baghdad National Library, around one million
books were burnt, including early editions of Arabian Nights, mathematical
treatises by Omar Khayyam, and tracts by philosophers Avicena and Averroes.
IPS: Thousands of relics were also lost from the National Archaeological
Museum.
FB: The initial reports spoke of 170,000 objects, but 25 major
artifacts as well as 14,000 less important ones actually disappeared. An amnesty
for the looters led to the recovery of around 3,500, according to the U.S.
colonel who led the investigations, Matthew Bogdanos.
But besides the
national museum and library, the Al-Awqaf library, which held over 5,000 Islamic
manuscripts, university libraries and the library of Bayt al-Hikma also
suffered. At least 10 million documents have been lost in Iraq altogether.
(Báez has said his research into the destruction of libraries and
archives was first motivated by his painful childhood memories of a flash flood
that wiped away the library in his hometown, San Félix in southeastern
Venezuela. He cherished the municipal library because since his parents worked,
he had often been left with relatives who worked there, and spent his days
reading.
His research culminated in "A Universal History of the
Destruction of Books", which documents the catastrophic loss of books during
wars, like the Library of Alexandria, which burnt down in 48 B.C., or the
burning of millions of books by the Nazis.)
IPS: Do you believe military
forces have been the worst enemy of books?
FB: No, actually I don't. I
believe intellectuals are the worst enemies. Intellectuals have burnt books in
the name of the Bible or the Koran. Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977) burnt "El
Quixote" in front of his students. Destroyers like Adolph Hitler or Slobodan
Milosevic were bibliophiles. Saddam Hussein himself, an archaeologist and
philologist, published three novels. Joseph Goebbels, the genius of Nazi
propaganda, was a philologist.
And many of those who have led the U.S.
to war in Iraq are academics. It is a paradox: the inventors of the electronic
book returned to Mesopotamia, where books, history and civilisation were born,
to destroy it. (END/2005)