Morning Sun

Destroying Gaza’s cultural heritage a crime

- By Karen Attiah

Over the past several weeks, Israel’s assault on Gaza has unleashed all sorts of violence and not just the obvious kind.

As of this writing, the death toll from the current conflict has passed 15,000. We have seen the images of dead and injured, of people pulling victims from rubble. There has been much global outcry over Israel’s bombing of hospitals, schools and refugee camps.

But one of the less-talked-about aspects of Israel’s bombardmen­t is the destructio­n of cultural heritage: documents, monuments and artifacts.

On Oct. 19, Israel airstrikes damaged part of the Greek Orthodox Church of St. Porphyrius. Four hundred people had been sheltering inside, and 18 Palestinia­n Christians were killed. Built in the 12th century, the church is thought to be the third-oldest in the world.

Memorials to prominent Palestinia­n figures have not been spared. On Oct. 27, the Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s condemned the bulldozing of the shrine in Jenin where Palestinia­n American journalist Shireen

Abu Akleh was shot and killed last year, most likely by an Israeli soldier.

On Nov. 14, video emerged of an Israeli bulldozer in the West Bank demolishin­g monuments to the longtime Palestinia­n leader Yasser Arafat.

On X, writer and translator Lina Mounzer posted a translatio­n of a statement by the Meqdad Printing Press and Library:

“Meqdad Printing Press & Library, one of the oldest in Gaza. Millions lost: printing presses & books & equipment. The cumulative efforts of my entire family: my mother, father & siblings. Gone in an instant; my father left w/ nothing.”

And this week, according to the digital intelligen­ce and sourcing site Storyful, Gaza’s main public library and central archives were ravaged. The Municipali­ty of Gaza stated that thousands of historical documents had been deliberate­ly destroyed and called for UNESCO to “intervene and protect cultural centers and condemn the occupation’s targeting of these humanitari­an facilities protected under internatio­nal humanitari­an law.”

Fighting back tears, a Palestinia­n filmmaker named Bisan Owda posted on Instagram from Gaza about the destructio­n of the archives, which she said had housed documents that were more than 100 years old. “Now, literally we don’t have anything,” she said. “The future is unknown, the present is destroyed and the past is no longer our past ... . Can you imagine that they are doing all these things to destroy the depth of us?”

Under UNESCO’S 1954 Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, cultural property is protected under internatio­nal law. Scholars have long argued that the intentiona­l destructio­n of cultural heritage is a genocidal act, comparable to the killing and displaceme­nt of people because it results, as one political philosophe­r put it, in a “loss of a people themselves.”

It is understand­able that amid the horrors carried out over the past 50-plus days, preserving objects and buildings might not be seen as important as protecting innocent life. But the preservati­on of culture and history is part and parcel of protecting a people and their spirit. If Israel continues to destroy Gaza’s cultural heritage with impunity, all of humanity loses.

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