The Scotsman

Egypt’s fallen Indiana and the museum of his dreams

- BRIAN ROHAN

FOR more than a decade, he was the self-styled Indiana Jones of Egypt, presiding over its antiquitie­s and striding through temples and tombs as the star of TV documentar­ies that made him an internatio­nal celebrity.

But four years after the uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak and nearly ended his own career, Zahi Hawass can be found in a cramped Cairo office, lamenting the state of the antiquitie­s bureaucrac­y he once ruled like a pharaoh and dreaming of a new museum whose fate lies in limbo. His trademark widebrimme­d hat and safari vest may be hung up for now, but he is brimming with ideas on how to revive Egypt’s antiquitie­s and bring back tourists after years of unrest.

A long-planned new facility out by the pyramids, called the Grand Egyptian Museum, was intended to open this year, but the government says it is short the $1 billion (£637,000) needed to complete the project.

“Government routine cannot work for museums,” Mr Hawass said in an interview in his office, asserting that state bureaucrac­y

Zahi Hawass

sits

in

his

Cairo

office is one of the main reasons the current Egyptian Museum has fallen into disrepair. For the new museum, “the directorsh­ip, the curatorshi­p, it can be from

working

on

plans

for

the

Grand Egyptian Museum – America, from Germany, from England, from any place in the world. You need this museum to be internatio­nal”.

He also says private, internatio­nal sponsorshi­p is needed.

“If you pay $10,000, I put your name, written on the wall of the museum. If you pay $100,000, I put your name on the facade of the museum. If you build a whole gallery, I will name (the gallery after you),” he said, adding that the government should announce that Egyptian monuments belong to the entire world, not just Egyptians.

As to the challenge of moving artifacts from the current museum in downtown Cairo over bumpy roads to the site of the new facility on the city’s outskirts, Mr Hawass says “any TV channel” would pick up the tab in return for exclusive rights to document the artifacts’ restoratio­n and transport. “They will run in competitio­n to do this,” he said.

Mr Hawass knows TV. He was once a staple on the Discovery

Hawass says

despite

treasures

a

$1bn

belong Channel and had his own reality show on the History Channel called Chasing Mummies, the promo for which introduced him by saying: “100,000 years of history belong to one man… Only he holds the key to the world’s greatest ruins.”

The production­s earned him droves of fans abroad but led to accusation­s of grandstand­ing in Egypt, where he was seen by many as a self-promoter who

to

funds

the

shortfall

world,

not

just

Egypt mistreated subordinat­es and abused his position for personal gain.

He lost his job as head of antiquitie­s after the 2011 uprising and faced corruption charges, of which he was later cleared.

But his swashbuckl­ing antics gave a boost to Egyptian archaeolog­y, with fundraisin­g efforts and internatio­nal tours of King Tut artifacts generating tens of millions of dollars.

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Picture: AP
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