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Image Credit: DGAM, Syria - November 25, 2014 |
The last time ARCA wrote on the status of the Ar-Raqqah Museum was in
November 25, 2014, ten months after the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (known also as ISIL, Daesh, IS, ISIS) overtook the city of Raqqa. In that post we reported on a bomb that had been dropped near Arafat Square which caused structural damage to the museum's facades, as well as damage to its doors, shutters and windows. Used by militants as a military headquarters, the museum already carried heavy scars and its collection had already been subject to plundering.
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Image Credit: Twitter User @AfarinMamosta
- September 15, 2017 |
This month, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have been making game-altering advances against Daesh in Raqqa's Old City. At the height of this campaign, an
estimated two dozen air strikes rain down on the city each day. Others observers
(Airwars) have estimated that US-led forces dropped 5,775 bombs, shells and missiles onto the city in the month of August alone.
Whatever the exact number, the push of
Operation Euphrates Wrath seems to be well underway, with
SDF forces reporting that 80 percent of the embattled city has now been liberated. Unfortunately much of what remains of the once vibrant community has been left smouldering and in ruin.
ISIL gained full control of Raqqa in January 2014, and made the city the capital of its self-declared "caliphate". While under Da'esh's control, Raqqa will forever be remembered for being the backdrop of some of the militants' most gruesome executions. Risking their lives to document these human rights atrocities, citizen journalists focused their efforts on documenting the human tragedy of the city's inhabitants. Reporting on the status of the city's cultural heritage took an objectively necessary backseat.
But as this September campaign to recapture the city progresses, and hardline militants begin to lose their stranglehold on Raqqa, video and
photos have emerged that give us more information on the current condition of Ar-Raqqah Museum.
Video credit: Twitter User @HassounMazen
The Museum of Raqqa was founded in 1981 and was primarily dedicated to the preservation and exhibition of cultural heritage gathered from excavation research from the Ar-Raqqah province. Its collection included objects from Tell Bi’a, Tell Munbaqa, Tell Sabi Abyad, and Tell Chuera, and artefacts that date from Roman and Byzantine eras as well as objects from the Islamic period (the epoch of Haroun al-Rachid) and from the period of more recent Bedouin domination.
When fully operational, the museum once contained roughly 6,000 artefacts. Many of those now, seem to have been looted, defaced or destroyed.
In Spring 2012 Syria's Directorate-General of Antiquities & Museums (DGAM) reported that an armed group called Ahar al Sham had moved 527 artefacts from the museum under the pretext of protecting them. In June 2013 robbers seized an additional six containers of museum objects that had previously been stored in the Raqqa Museum’s warehouse. Through cooperation and negotiations with members of the local community
three of these boxes were later identified in Tabaqa under the control of a group called “Cham Free People”. While the found boxes contained 104 artifacts, no further information is available as to what happened to the remaining objects removed in 2012 and 2013.
A report of the archaeological heritage in Syria during the crisis from 2011 through early 2013 written by Professor Dr
Maamoun Abdulkarim, Syria's now former Director General of the country's Directorate-General for Antiquities and Museums (DGAM) can be read
here.
After Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) liberated the area surrounding the Raqqqa museum
a delegation from ATPA in Al Jazira Canton represented by Berivan Younes, Ristem Abdo, and Sipan Abdul Ghafoor visited the area on September 20, 2017. Their objective was to do initial damage assessments on some of what remains of the city's cultural heritage.
While SDF fighters have taken the museum under their protection and destroyed many mines around it, ATPA was not allowed to enter the museum itself, as SDF’s special units still need to deal with the mines rigged inside the museum.
ATPA’s initial report can be found
here.
A recently funded project at the University of Leiden called Focus Raqqa is aiming to make a digital inventory of the objects once housed in the Raqqa museum as many of the artefacts plundered were once excavated by Dutch archaeologists. This digital record may become useful in the future in identifying looted objects should they resurface later on the commercial art market.
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Image Credit: Twitter User @AfarinMamosta
- September 15, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ANF News - September 15, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: Twitter User @HassounMazen
- September 15, 2017 |
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Image Credit: Twitter User @AfarinMamosta
- September 15, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
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Image Credit: ATPA in Al Jazira Canton - September 20, 2017 |
By: Lynda Albertson
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