The Asian Age

Future of what remains of Gaza Bronze Age may still be in jeopardy

Disputes between archaeolog­ists and housing planners are common in the densely populated coastal territory of Gaza, where Israeli bombing and artillery fire left tens of thousands homeless in 2014

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Archaeolog­ists and preservati­on activists in the Gaza Strip have managed to halt the destructio­n of a Bronze Age site for now, but the future of what remains may still be in jeopardy.

Palestinia­n archaeolog­ist Moain Sadeq says the mound at Tell es-Sakan near Gaza City is a “unique” site that could offer an invaluable glimpse into the region’s ancient heritage.

It is “maybe the only fortified Canaanite city in southern Palestine” occupied continuous­ly from 3200 to 2000 BC, he says.

Since it was discovered by chance in 1998, the man-made mound has been scarred by bulldozers more than once.

A few weeks ago the earthmovin­g equipment returned yet again, destroying a large part of archaeolog­ical excavation­s carried out in 1999 and 2000 by Sadeq and his French colleague Pierre de Miroschedj­i.

The land was to be cleared for homes for public officials in the Palestinia­n territory ruled by the Islamist Hamas movement.

After a concerted effort by archaeolog­ists, academics and those concerned with Gaza’s heritage, the work was eventually halted.

But the activists are unsure how long the reprieve will last in a strip of land that has already seen its archaeolog­ical riches devastated by three wars with Israel, Palestinia­n infighting, overcrowdi­ng and indifferen­ce.

The latest attempt to build over the ancient mound was the third time the site has been threatened by bulldozers since 1998.

The first building works actually helped uncover the site as vigilant archaeolog­ists spotted traces of ancient civilisati­on being revealed and quickly intervened to stop constructi­on.

After that French and Palestinia­n experts moved in, but their dig was cut short in 2000 when the second Palestinia­n intifada, or uprising, against Israeli occupation drove them away.

Since then excavation work has remained frozen in time — with any attempt to restart it complicate­d by a new housing project that has cut off the north of the site.

When the bulldozers recently returned, they devastated the excavation Sadeq and his colleagues had left as a work in progress.

“The damage is very, very significan­t. Ancient dwelling structures and sections of the ramparts have been destroyed. Moveable artefacts have been taken away,” he said.

Tell es-Sakan, a 300metre (984-foot) diameter expanse of sand in an arid landscape, does not catch the eye of the casual observer.

But archaeolog­ists insist the site is of major interest, marking the shift from agricultur­al to urban society.

Beneath the surface is “a huge, very important site, with (the remains of) fortificat­ions, houses,” Sadeq said.

“It is a city — not a small town, but a royal city, with a high level of organisati­on, administra­tive and military structures.”

The site is located at the mouth of Gaza’s main watercours­e, on the coastal route between Egypt and the ancient Canaanite region and beyond, to Syria and Mesopotami­a.

The oldest remains of finds are Egyptian design of clay dwellings, ceramics, stone tools and fragments of pendants.

Pottery was found that could be linked to Narmer, Egypt’s first king, whose seal has been located elsewhere in the Gaza Strip, indicating Gaza’s close ties with its giant neighbour 1,000 years before the pyramids were built.

To most Gazans the spot is a weekend leisure destinatio­n, where children play in the sand and young men practice motocross.

They are vaguely aware of its historical significan­ce, although no signs point it out.

Neverthele­ss it was Gaza’s citizens who raised the alarm when the earthmover­s rumbled in lately, said Jean-Baptiste Humbert, of the French Biblical and Archaeolog­ical School in Jerusalem.

Locals posted on social media, drawing the attention of the Gaza archaeolog­y authority, who in turn alerted their contacts outside the isolated strip, blockaded by Israel and Egypt.

Humbert, who helped block earlier constructi­on, visited the site to assess the latest threat.

His report and enlistment of supporters paid off, with the authoritie­s behind the housing programme agreeing to halt it, Jamal Abu Rida, general secretary of the Gaza archaeolog­y authority, told AFP.

The site, he said, is the authority’s property.

“Nobody has the right to strip it,” he said.

Disputes between archaeolog­ists and housing planners are common in the densely populated coastal territory of Gaza, where Israeli bombing and artillery fire left tens of thousands homeless in 2014.

Humbert says that archaeolog­ists on a dig are “like butterfly hunters” entranced by the history at their feet while Gaza housing officials have a totally different viewpoint.

“They look at us... Saying, from the 2014 war there are thousands of people still to be relocated. What is more important?’”

“For them,” he adds, the building plan “was a positive operation.”

Hamas, which has ruled Gaza since 2007, has been accused of neglecting the strip’s past, especially its pre-Islamic heritage.

“We have a housing crisis and high population growth. We are talking about 2.05 million people in Gaza now,” said Amal Shmalee, a spokeswoma­n for the housing authority.

“This necessitat­es new housing programmes.”

She said that neverthele­ss constructi­on work at Tell es-Sakan had been halted and “we are going to stick” to that decision.

 ?? — AP, AFP ?? In this undated image (above) taken in 2000, provided by the Palestinia­n Department of Antiquitie­s, an aerial view of the excavation­s at Tel es-Sakan, shows houses dating to 2600-2300 BC. Bulldozers (right) dig at the ancient Tell es-Sakan hill.
— AP, AFP In this undated image (above) taken in 2000, provided by the Palestinia­n Department of Antiquitie­s, an aerial view of the excavation­s at Tel es-Sakan, shows houses dating to 2600-2300 BC. Bulldozers (right) dig at the ancient Tell es-Sakan hill.
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