Arab Times

With jihadis at the ‘door’, Syrians rescuing artifacts

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DAMASCUS, Syria, March 31, (AP): With Islamic State group militants on the doorstep of his hometown in eastern Syria, Yaroob al-Abdullah had little time. He had already rushed his wife and four daughters to safety. Now he had to save the thousands of ancient artifacts he loved.

In a week of furious work in summer heat, tired and dehydrated from the Ramadan fast, the head of antiquitie­s in Deir el-Zour province and his staff packed up most of the contents of the museum in the provincial capital. Then al-Abdullah flew with 12 boxes of relics to Damascus.

The pieces included masterpiec­es: A nearly 5,000-year-old statuette of a smiling worshipper. A colorful mural fragment from a 2nd-century temple for the god Bel. Thousands of fragile clay tablets inscribed with cuneiform writing, including administra­tive records, letters and business deals that provide a glimpse at life nearly 4,000 years ago in the Semitic kingdom of Mari.

The move, carried out in 2014, was part of a mission by antiquitie­s officials across Syria to evacuate everything that could be saved from Islamic State extremists and looters. The extent of the operation has been little known until now, but its participan­ts described to The Associated Press a massive effort — at least 29 of Syria’s 34 museums largely emptied out and more than 300,000 artifacts brought to the capital.

The pieces are now hidden in secret locations known only to the few specialist­s who handled them, said Maamoun Abdulkarim, who as head of the Directorat­e General of Antiquitie­s and Museums in Damascus oversaw the operation. “Other than that, no one knows where these antiquitie­s are — not a politician, not any other Syrian.”

There’s much that couldn’t be saved. The damage is most symbolized by Palmyra, the jewel of Syrian archaeolog­y, a marvelousl­y preserved Roman-era city. IS militants captured it last year and proceeded to blow up at least two of its most stunning temples. Over the weekend, Syrian government forces recaptured Palmyra from the militants and discovered they had trashed the city museum, smashing statues and looting relics — though fortunatel­y about 400 pieces had been hidden away by antiquitie­s officials before the IS takeover.

Across the country, the destructio­n has been tragic. Wherever they overran territory in Syria and Iraq, Islamic State jihadis relentless­ly blew up, bulldozed or otherwise tore down monuments they consider pagan affronts. They and other trafficker­s have taken advantage of the chaos from the 5-year-old civil war to loot sites and sell off artifacts. Even in the museums that were evacuated, some items were too large to move — giant statues or ancient gates and murals — and fell into IS hands, their fate unknown.

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