Arab Times

World’s oldest library holds gems

‘Qarawiyyin library a house of science, wisdom’

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FEZ, Morocco, Dec 1, (AFP): Nestled in a labyrinth of streets in the heart of Morocco’s ancient city of Fez, stands the world’s oldest working library.

Its sculpted dark wooden door stands almost hidden on the edge of a square where artisans hammer away at copper in a deafening din, delighting passing tourists.

But for the few lucky enough to be allowed behind the door, a staircase tiled with green and blue hints at the written wonders beyond.

As early writings from the Arabicspea­king world have come under increasing threat from extremists, the Qarawiyyin library is home to priceless treatises in Islamic studies, astronomy and medicine.

Last year the Islamic State group burned thousands of rare manuscript­s at the Mosul library in Iraq, and in 2013 Islamists torched countless early writings from the Islamic world and Greece in Mali’s Timbuktu.

The Qarawiyyin library has just emerged from years of restoratio­n, although no date has yet been fixed for a public opening.

“All that’s left to be done are a few finishing touches and the electricit­y,” says Boubker Jouane, the library’s deputy director.

“A house of science and wisdom”, according to its founder Fatima AlFihri, the Qarawiyyin library was one of the Arab world’s largest centres of learning.

Fihri, the daughter of a wealthy merchant from Al-Qayrawan in Tunisia, establishe­d the library, the university

The third one they discovered, element 118, was named oganesson — symbol Og — in homage to Russian nuclear physicist Yuri Oganessian, in recognitio­n of his that originally housed it and a mosque in 859.

Today the university has moved to a new location, but the mosque — which shares an emerald-green tile roof with the library — still stands.

The library as it appears today was built in the 14th century under sultan Abu Inan, and completely restructur­ed under king Mohammed V, the grandfathe­r of Morocco’s current monarch.

Over the centuries, sultans, noblemen, princesses and wise men have contribute­d works to its shelves.

Under an imposing ceiling of wooden arabesques and a huge copper chandelier, the main reading room sits next an area that contains some 20,000 books.

A short walk — through a corridor of mosaics, past panels of sculpted cedar wood under finely chiselled ceilings — leads to the library’s centrepiec­e.

Manuscript

The manuscript room is hidden behind two heavy metal doors and protected by an alarm system and surveillan­ce cameras.

Its wooden window shutters are closed to prevent sunlight from entering.

The precious manuscript­s are each bundled in a grey-coloured cardboard file and displayed on standard metal shelves.

Works can be consulted sitting at one of two chairs next to a simple table — on which sits a green felt cushion embroidere­d with gold thread.

Around 3,800 titles are kept here, some of them priceless.

“pioneering contributi­ons” in elements research.

North Carolina-based IUPAC said that the names were officially accepted after a

One example is a treatise on medicine by philosophe­r and physician Ibn Tufayl from the 12th century.

“From baldness to corn on the foot, all ailments of the body are listed — in verse to make them easier to learn,” Jouane says.

The word “diabetes”, which is of Greek origin, already features written in Arabic script.

Another gem is a handwritte­n copy of historian and philosophe­r Ibn Khaldun’s “Book of Lessons”. The treatise in history has been signed by the 14thcentur­y thinker himself.

“Praise be to God, what is written belongs to me,” a line he wrote reads in breathtaki­ngly elegant handwritin­g.

Another 12th-century manuscript — a treatise in astronomy by philosophe­r Al-Farabi — shows the course of the planet Jupiter, complete with drawings of astonishin­g precision.

And then there is a treatise on the Malikite doctrine in Islam written by the grandfathe­r of the Arab philosophe­r Averroes.

Its 200 pages of gazelle leather are inscribed with tiny immaculate calligraph­y dotted with embellishm­ents in gold ink.

Perhaps surprising­ly, one of the “works most in demand” according to Jouane is Christian: a 12th century copy of the Gospel of Mark in Arabic.

It was translated “in all likelihood by a Christian man of letters from Andalusia who had come to Qarawiyyin to learn Arabic”, says Jouane, expressing pride at the “incredible degree of tolerance at the time”.

5-month public review period. (AFP)

‘Protect heritage sites’:

Five Nobel prize winners called Thursday for urgent internatio­nal action to protect world heritage sites from the destructio­n wrought by extremist groups and conflicts.

In an appeal launched on the eve of an internatio­nal conference in Abu Dhabi, the laureates pointed to the irreparabl­e damage that has been done to some of the world’s most treasured ancient sites in Iraq, Syria, Afghanista­n, and Mali.

“Part of our history has been lost forever, with the goal of fanaticism being to undermine our hope for the future,” they said.

“Urgent action must be taken — the time for powerless expression­s of indignatio­n is over.”

The signatorie­s included Myanmar’s de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi, Liberian President Helen Johnson Sirleaf and former UN chief Kofi Annan.

They also included Nobel literature laureates Orhan Pamuk of Turkey and Mario Vargas Llosa of Peru.

As examples they cited the demolition by the Islamic State group over the past two years of the temples and tower tombs of the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria and the priceless collection of the Mosul Museum in Iraq.

They also recalled the destructio­n by the Taleban of the ancient Buddha statues of Bamiyan in Afghanista­n in 2001 and the damage dealt by Mali’s Ansar al-Dine militia to ancient mausoleums and manuscript­s in Timbuktu in 2012-3. (AFP)

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