The Guardian (USA)

American tourist arrested for damaging Roman statues at Israel Museum

- Associated Press

Israeli police have arrested an American tourist at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem after he hurled works of art to the floor, defacing two second-century Roman statues.

The vandalism late on Thursday raised questions about the safety of the priceless collection­s and stirred concern about a rise in attacks on cultural heritage in Jerusalem.

Police identified the suspect as a radical 40-year-old Jewish American tourist, and said initial questionin­g suggested he had smashed the statues because he considered them “to be idolatrous and contrary to the Torah”.

The man’s lawyer, Nick Kaufman, denied that the tourist had acted out of religious fanaticism.

Instead, Kaufman said, the man was suffering from a mental disorder that psychiatri­sts have labelled the Jerusalem syndrome. The condition– a form of disorienta­tion believed to be induced by the religious magnetism of the city, which is sacred to Christians, Jews and Muslims – is said to cause foreign pilgrims to believe they are figures from the Bible.

The defendant has been ordered to undergo a psychiatri­c evaluation. Officials did not release his name due to a gag order.

With religious passions burning and tensions simmering during the Jewish holiday season, spitting and other assaults on Christian worshipper­s by radical ultra-Orthodox Jews have been on the rise, unnerving tourists, outraging local Christians and sparking widespread condemnati­on. The Jewish holiday of Sukkot, the harvest festival, ends on Friday at sundown.

The prominent Israel Museum, with its exhibits of archaeolog­y, fine arts, and artefacts of Jewish art and life, described Thursday’s vandalism as a “troubling and unusual event”, and said it “condemns all forms of violence and hopes such incidents will not recur”.

Museum photos showed the marble head of the goddess Athena knocked off its pedestal on to the floor and a

statue of a pagan deity shattered into fragments. The damaged statues were being restored, museum staff said. The museum declined to state the value of the statues or cost of the damage.

The Israeli government expressed alarm over the defacement, which officials also attributed to Jewish iconoclasm in obedience to early prohibitio­ns against idolatry.

“This is a shocking case of the destructio­n of cultural values,” said Eli

Escusido, director of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority. “We see with concern the fact that cultural values are being destroyed by religiousl­y motivated extremists.”

The vandalism appeared to be the latest in a spate of attacks by Jews against historical objects in Jerusalem. In February, a Jewish American tourist damaged a statue of Jesus at a Christian pilgrimage site in the Old City, and in January, Jewish teenagers defaced historical Christian tombstones at a prominent Jerusalem cemetery.

On Friday morning, about 16 hours after the defacement at the museum, the doors opened to the public at the regularly scheduled time.

 ?? ?? The marble head of a statue of the goddess Athena was knocked off its pedestal and another statue shattered. Photograph: The Israel Museum
The marble head of a statue of the goddess Athena was knocked off its pedestal and another statue shattered. Photograph: The Israel Museum

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