Gulf News

Museum showcases stolen artefacts

NEW EXTENSION OF ISLAMABAD MUSEUM TO OPEN NEW VISTAS FOR CULTURAL HERITAGE VISITORS

- ISLAMABAD BY SANA JAMAL Correspond­ent

Islamabad Museum reopened this week after months of intense work, showcasing new artefacts of high historical value and allowing visitors to see Pakistan in a new light.

On display at the museum are 46 priceless smuggled artefacts that were recently returned to Pakistan by the United States government. The stolen artefacts finally returned home after months of negotiatio­ns, diplomacy, and legal proceeding­s required to obtain the return of the looted art. In November 2022, the United States returned another 192 looted antiquitie­s with a value of nearly $3.4 million to Pakistan after years-long investigat­ion into the multimilli­on-dollar traffickin­g network.

First-time display

Among the recovered items exhibited at Islamabad Museum is the second-century Buddhist sculpture worth more than $1.1 million that was smuggled from Swat Valley in the 1980s.

“This ancient piece called Buddhapada depicts the footprint of the Buddha and is decorated with typical Gandharan art,” the museum director Dr Abdul Ghafoor told Gulf News. The unique feature of the Buddhapada, which is 116 centimetre­s wide and 90 centimetre­s tall, is its sacred symbols including the lotus flower, swastika (symbol of well-being), and dharmachak­ra (the Wheel of the Law), Triratna (three jewels) representi­ng Buddha, his doctrine and his followers, he explained. This ancient piece of Pakistan’s history and culture is now on display at the Islamabad Museum. Pakistan has one of the world’s biggest collection­s of Buddhist artefacts at Peshawar Museum.

Amir Muqam, the adviser to prime minister on national heritage and culture, inaugurate­d the renovated Islamabad Museum and praised the efforts of the Department of Archaeolog­y and Museums (DOAM). He said the recovered antiquitie­s would add significan­t value to the museum and allow visitors to reconnect with the rich history of Pakistan. “This new extension of Islamabad Museum will open new vistas for cultural heritage visitors” he said.

Priceless exhibits

Islamabad Museum, currently housed in the Sir Syed Memorial building at Ataturk Avenue, is safeguardi­ng the country’s artistic and cultural treasures. There are more than 760 artefacts including rare stone tool dating back to 2 million years, ceramics from 9,000 years old civilisati­on, Gandhara period art, rare manuscript­s from Mughal era. The museum’s collection offers a new light into the transforma­tion of the stone age into an urban lifestyle in Pakistan.

“We are proud to have a complete chain of artefacts in a sequence that begin from 2 million years ago stone age. We have traces of old tools found in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a that are some 22,000 years old,” says Dr Abdul Ghafoor, an archeologi­st with over 26 years of experience.

Mehrgarh, located in Balochista­n, was one of the earliest settlement­s ever discovered in South Asia that existed around 9,000 years ago, he continues. The Mehrgarh settlement that remained hidden for thousands of years was discovered by French and Pakistani archaeolog­ists in 1974.

The museum also features artefacts from Indus Valley Civilizati­on that goes back to almost 5,000 years around the time when the first pyramids were being built in Egypt. The Indus civilisati­on is known as “the first planned city in the world” built with baked bricks, fascinatin­g architectu­re, and elaborate drainage systems.

This ancient piece called Buddhapada depicts the footprint of the Buddha and is decorated with typical Gandharan art.”

Fascinatin­g artefacts

When asked which artefact he finds most fascinatin­g, the Islamabad Museum director said “every artefact is culturally significan­t” but the most fascinatin­g is the 2 million years old stone tool unearthed in Rawat near Islamabad. “This is one of the oldest such artefacts found after stone tool discovered in Kenya 3.3 million years ago” he said while giving a tour of the museum.

Some of the magnificen­t relics on display are 17-18 century Quran manuscript­s with illuminati­on in gold, 4,800-year-old pottery and terracotta figurines from Mehergarh, chert blades from Rohri Hills Sindh (between 10,000-3000 BC) and seals and stamps from Harappa from 3,000BC. One of the displays that attract visitors is the Mughal miniature painting in ivory that depicts the crowded court of the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar in Diwan-e-Khas of Red Fort in Delhi.

“Pakistan is one of the most ancient lands and has been home to many cultures and civilisati­ons with the oldest traces from the Old Stone Age about two million years now. This journey over the two million years is an achievemen­t that we have proudly displayed at the museum to pass on this ancient knowledge to our future generation­s” said Dr Ghafoor.

Dr Abdul Ghafoor | Islamabad Museum director

 ?? Sana Jamal ?? A rare Quran manuscript at Islamabad Museum.
Sana Jamal A rare Quran manuscript at Islamabad Museum.
 ?? Sana Jamal ?? The 2nd century sculpture of Buddha’s footprints is one of the precious artefacts on display at Islamabad Museum.
Sana Jamal The 2nd century sculpture of Buddha’s footprints is one of the precious artefacts on display at Islamabad Museum.
 ?? ?? The 9000-year-old Mehrgarh civilisati­on artefacts on display, while, right, Buddhist sculptures being exhibited at the Islamabad Museum.
The 9000-year-old Mehrgarh civilisati­on artefacts on display, while, right, Buddhist sculptures being exhibited at the Islamabad Museum.
 ?? Sana Jamal ??
Sana Jamal

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