Wednesday, 3 June 2015
amazing!!! Scholars rush to save a 5,000 year-old archaeological site
Saving Mes Aynak, which was screened at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
in Durham, North Carolina, last month, is the story of an imminent archaeological
tragedy in Afghanistan that seems like a fait accompli.
Mes Aynak is a vast site in a mountainous area south of Kabul, near Afghanistan’s
border with Pakistan and adjacent to Taliban supply routes. The area is roughly
the size of the city of Pompeii in Italy. Archaeologists say it is one of the
richest sites in the country, with objects dating back 5,000 years. Excavations
were conducted recently with the support of the French government and continue
with urgency with a skeleton Afghan crew. Yet more than 90% of the site still remains unexamined.
It is almost sure to be under-examined. Mes Aynak is also the site of extensive
copper deposits, which explains why it was a trading centre for centuries.
The name Mes Anynak means “little source of copper,” although “little” understates
the case. Those deposits are now under contract for extraction by China Metallurgical
Group Corporation, a state-owned Chinese mining conglomerate that plans to begin
mining the site this year. The copper underneath is said to be worth $100 billion,
according to the Afghan government. That is an amount that might make the occasional Taliban attack seem tolerable.
The fight over Mes Aynak is the subject of this documentary film by Brent Huffman.
The main narrator of the grim tale is the Afghan archaeologist Qadir Temori. With
the help of French archaeologists, Temori and his team have unearthed temples,
fortifications, objects and stupas (memorials) that reflect the Buddhist and
Hellenistic styles common to the region. But China Metallurgical Group
Corporation has built an extensive modern camp for workers and is poised t
o remove the hills and the ancient remains beneath with modern bulldozers.
To call this a David and Goliath story is like saying $100 billion is a modest
incentive. The American archaeologist Mark Kenoyer, a specialist in Afghan
and Pakistani cultures, compares bulldozing the site to submerging the city of
Atlantis. The French archaeologist Philippe Marquis calls it “the tip of the
iceberg.”We are told in interviews with Afghan officials that the proposed mine
will enrich the country with $7 billion dollars of economic activity.
A golden Buddha from Mes Aynak. Courtesy Saving Mes Aynak
We are also told by former government employees that the minister responsible
for the deal— which involved a Chinese payment of some $3 billion to the
minister—is living in a luxurious new house. (That official has since resigned
and has accused his successor of corruption, Huffman says.)
International protests have not made much difference. Alarmed archaeologists
and Buddhists around the world achieved a brief delay by raising their voices,
yet the mining seems set to begin.
Saving Mes Aynak does not fit the usual contours of films about art. There are
exquisite objects on screen that came fr om recent excavations, although most
of them are too recently unearthed to be conserved and exhibited in a delicately-li
t jewel-box museum context. They are hardly the proven treasures that might induce
politicians to fight for preservation.
A chilling parallel to this film came in another documentary at the Full Frame
Documentary Film Festival. Overburden by Chad Stevens examines the practice of
mountaintop removal to extract coal quickly and cheaply over a vast area, with a
fraction of the workers required in the conventional deep mining process. Citizens
in West Virginia who feared the destruction of their homes and water sources locked
horns with a huge coal company, Massey Energy (which has since been sold to Alpha
Natural Resources), and coalminers who were fighting for their jobs.
Saving Mes Aynak involves a hauntingly similar standoff. Overburden is the mining
term that refers to rock and dirt between the surface and mineral deposits.
In Mes Aynak, 5,000 years of culture are the overburden.
Huffman shows grim video of the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas by the Taliban
in 2002, yet at a time when the destruction of ancient cultures is a stated policy
of the Islamic State, Saving Mes Aynak presents us with a different crisis:
the horror of business as usual. Under governments
wh ere conservation doesn’t count for much, the race for resources runs faster than rescue archaeology.
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