Waterloo Region Record

In Gaza, Hamas levels an ancient treasure

The complete southern façade of the Tel is erased

- Fares Akram

Palestinia­n and French archeologi­sts began excavating Gaza’s earliest archeologi­cal site nearly 20 years ago, unearthing what they believe is a rare 4,500-year-old Bronze Age settlement.

But over protests that grew recently, Gaza’s Hamas rulers have systematic­ally destroyed the work since seizing power a decade ago, allowing the flattening of this hill on the southern tip of Gaza City to make way for constructi­on projects, and later military bases. In its newest project, Hamas-supported bulldozers are flattening the last remnants of excavation.

“There is a clear destructio­n of a very important archeologi­cal site,” said Palestinia­n archeology and history professor Mouin Sadeq, who led three excavation­s at the site along with French archeologi­st Pierre de Miroschedj­i after its accidental discovery in 1998. “I don’t know why the destructio­n of the site was approved.”

Tel Es-Sakan (hill of ash) was the largest Canaanite city between Palestine and Egypt, according to Sadeq. It was named after the great amount of ash found during the excavation­s, which suggests the settlement was burnt either naturally or in a war.

Archaeolog­ists found the 10hectare hill to be hiding a fortified settlement built centuries before pharaonic rule in Egypt, and 1,000 years before the pyramids. But the excavation­s stopped in 2002 due to security concerns.

When calls on Hamas to stop the recent flattening intensifie­d last month, the nearest available expert to gain access to Gaza was Jean-Baptiste Humbert, a Jerusalem-based archeologi­st at the École Biblique and who had excavated other sites in Gaza.

“Today the complete southern facade of the Tel is erased,” said Humbert. In previous years, faces and ramparts on other sides were also destroyed. “Now it is destroyed all around,” he said.

It’s among the earliest sites indicating the emergence of the “urban society” concept in the Near East, when communitie­s were transformi­ng from farming villages around 4,000 BC, and it was on trade routes between Egypt and the Levant, according to Humbert.

Humbert shared an aerial photo from 2000 showing patterns of walls from atop the mound. The area “was the first city of Palestine to have a city wall,” he said. Now, “the field work you see in the photo is totally destroyed.”

Gaza is home to numerous ancient treasures, but politics have long complicate­d archeologi­cal work.

The French excavation­s stopped in 2002 because of a Palestinia­n uprising in which protesters violently clashed with Israeli troops around the nearby Netzarim settlement. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005. But Hamas, shunned by the West as a terrorist group, won elections and eventually drove out the Western-backed Palestinia­n Authority in 2007. The excavation­s never resumed.

Unlike more extreme Islamic groups, Hamas has not deliberate­ly destroyed antiquitie­s for ideologica­l reasons.

But with little open space in Gaza, a fast-growing population and an economy stifled by Israeli and Egyptian blockades, Hamas officials say they have no choice but to develop the area, making archeology a low priority.

But the group has also seized ancient sites to build military training camps, including the 3,000-year-old Anthedon Harbor, parts of which were bulldozed in 2013.

In 2009 and 2012, the expansion of universiti­es destroyed the western and northern facades of Tel El-Sakan. People displaced during three wars between Hamas and Israel set up temporary dwellings on the eastern side.

The southern front remained, but Hamas says it needs the land to compensate some of its senior employees, who have only received partial salaries from the cash-strapped group.

When the bulldozer work started in early August, the Hamas-run Ministry of Tourism and Antiquitie­s appealed for help. Humbert rushed to Gaza, and with the help of colleagues from Gaza’s Islamic University, he succeeded in stopping the work while the ministry and Hamas’s Land Authority worked to settle the dispute.

Jamal Abu Rida, the ministry’s director of antiquitie­s, said Tel Es-Sakan is a protected archeologi­cal site, but that his ministry could not stop the more powerful Land Authority from destroying another 1.2 hectares.

The work resumed last week. Bulldozers loaded a truck with soil that contained fragments of jars. When the workers saw Associated Press cameras, they quickly left the scene.

Abu Rida said they recovered an early Bronze Age jar from the site during the most recent levelling. Fadel al-Outul a Gaza archeologi­st, salvaged fragments that he used to reassemble two thirds of another jar.

Junaid Sorosh-Wali, an official with the UN cultural agency UNESCO, inspected the damage at the site Tuesday. What happened was “disastrous for the archeology and cultural heritage in Palestine,” he said.

 ?? PIERRE DE MIROSCHEDJ­I, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An aerial view of the excavation­s at Tel Es-Sakan shows houses dating to 2600-2300 B.C., and fortificat­ions from the late fourth millennium BC, south of Gaza City. Palestinia­n and French archeologi­sts began excavating Gaza’s earliest archeologi­cal site...
PIERRE DE MIROSCHEDJ­I, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An aerial view of the excavation­s at Tel Es-Sakan shows houses dating to 2600-2300 B.C., and fortificat­ions from the late fourth millennium BC, south of Gaza City. Palestinia­n and French archeologi­sts began excavating Gaza’s earliest archeologi­cal site...

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