Climate finance must be fairer for emerging economies: Finance Minister    Al-Sisi orders expansion of oil, gas and mining exploration, new investor incentives    Cairo intensifies regional diplomacy to secure support for US Gaza resolution at UN    Egypt unveils National Digital Health Strategy 2025–2029 to drive systemwide transformation    Minapharm, Bayer sign strategic agreement to localize pharmaceutical manufacturing in Egypt    Egypt golf team reclaims Arab standing with silver; Omar Hisham Talaat congratulates team    ADCB launches ClimaTech Accelerator 2025    Egypt's FRA approves first digital platform for real estate fund investments    Egypt signs 15-year deal with Deutsche Bahn-El Sewedy consortium to run high-speed rail network    Egypt extends Eni's oil and gas concession in Suez Gulf, Nile Delta to 2040    Egypt launches National Strategy for Rare Diseases at PHDC'25    Egypt's Al-Sisi ratifies new criminal procedures law after parliament amends it    Egypt's FM discusses Gaza, Libya, Sudan at Turkey's SETA foundation    Egypt launches 3rd World Conference on Population, Health and Human Development    Cowardly attacks will not weaken Pakistan's resolve to fight terrorism, says FM    Egypt adds trachoma elimination to health success track record: WHO    Egypt, Latvia sign healthcare MoU during PHDC'25    Egypt, Sudan, UN convene to ramp up humanitarian aid in Sudan    Egyptians vote in 1st stage of lower house of parliament elections    Grand Egyptian Museum welcomes over 12,000 visitors on seventh day    Sisi meets Russian security chief to discuss Gaza ceasefire, trade, nuclear projects    Egypt repatriates 36 smuggled ancient artefacts from the US    Grand Egyptian Museum attracts 18k visitors on first public opening day    'Royalty on the Nile': Grand Ball of Monte-Carlo comes to Cairo    VS-FILM Festival for Very Short Films Ignites El Sokhna    Egypt's cultural palaces authority launches nationwide arts and culture events    Egypt launches Red Sea Open to boost tourism, international profile    Qatar to activate Egypt investment package with Matrouh deal in days: Cabinet    Omar Hisham Talaat: Media partnership with 'On Sports' key to promoting Egyptian golf tourism    Sisi expands national support fund to include diplomats who died on duty    Egypt's PM reviews efforts to remove Nile River encroachments    Al-Sisi: Cairo to host Gaza reconstruction conference in November    Egypt will never relinquish historical Nile water rights, PM says    Egypt resolves dispute between top African sports bodies ahead of 2027 African Games    Germany among EU's priciest labour markets – official data    Paris Olympic gold '24 medals hit record value    It's a bit frustrating to draw at home: Real Madrid keeper after Villarreal game    Russia says it's in sync with US, China, Pakistan on Taliban    Shoukry reviews with Guterres Egypt's efforts to achieve SDGs, promote human rights    Sudan says countries must cooperate on vaccines    Johnson & Johnson: Second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19    Egypt to tax bloggers, YouTubers    Egypt's FM asserts importance of stability in Libya, holding elections as scheduled    We mustn't lose touch: Muller after Bayern win in Bundesliga    Egypt records 36 new deaths from Covid-19, highest since mid June    Egypt sells $3 bln US-dollar dominated eurobonds    Gamal Hanafy's ceramic exhibition at Gezira Arts Centre is a must go    Italian Institute Director Davide Scalmani presents activities of the Cairo Institute for ITALIANA.IT platform    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.



Museum in Gaza to display area's rich cultural history
Published in Daily News Egypt on 14 - 08 - 2008

It may sound like the escapist indulgence of a well-fed man fleeing the misery around him. But when Jawdat Khoudary opened the first ever museum of archaeology in Gaza last month in an act of Palestinian patriotism, showing how this increasingly poor and isolated coastal strip now ruled by Hamas, was once a thriving multicultural crossroad.
The exhibit is housed in a stunning hall made up partly of the saved stones of old houses, discarded wood ties of a former railroad and bronze lamps and marble columns uncovered by Gazan fishermen and construction workers.
And while the display might be pretty standard stuff almost anywhere else - arrowheads, Roman anchors, Bronze Age vases and Byzantine columns - life is currently so gray in Gaza that the museum, with its glimpses of a rich outward-looking history, seems somehow dazzling.
The idea is to show our deep roots from many cultures in Gaza, Khoudary said as he sat in the lush, antiquities-filled garden of his Gaza City home a few miles from the museum. It s important that people realize we had a good civilization in the past. Israel has legitimacy from its history. We do too.
The oldest Gaza site dates from the middle of the fourth millennium B.C., when Gaza became the head of all the caravan routes linking the Arabian Peninsula and the Horn of Africa, via the Red Sea, to the Mediterranean.
History offers not only legitimacy, but a framework for coping with the present. Gaza is under an Israeli and international siege aimed at sapping strength from Hamas, widely viewed in the West as a terrorist group. But this is not the first time Gazans have faced such a squeeze.
Gaza has suffered more than most cities, Khoudary said. There was the siege of Alexander the Great and of the Persians and of the British. At the end of the day this siege will be a footnote.
Khoudary s collection includes thousands of items, but some of the most extraordinary of them will not go on display just now, including a statue of a full-breasted Aphrodite in a diaphanous gown, images of other ancient deities and oil lamps with Jewish menorahs on them.
Asked why, Khoudary noted Hamas rule and the conservative piety of the population and said simply: I want my project to succeed.
He did, however, bring a Hamas government minister to see the exhibit recently and pointed out two crosses on Byzantine columns to make sure the minister had no objections. The gap between the narrow-mindedness of Gaza today and the worldliness of the past is what most saddens him.
A prominent construction company owner, Khoudary, who is 48 and a believer in coexistence and global culture, has been collecting for 22 years, ever since he came across an Islamic glass coin and fell in love with its link to a bygone era. Since then, he has asked all his construction workers to save whatever is dug up so that he can go through it for treasures. Local fishermen know that anything old that washes ashore will fetch a decent price from Khoudary.
In 2005, he persuaded Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, to let him set up a national archaeological museum with Swiss help. A site was picked and a show was developed at the Geneva Museum of Art and History; it brought in large crowds.
Then in June 2007, some months after Hamas won a parliamentary majority, Hamas and the Fatah party of Abbas fought street battles that ended in the banishment of Fatah and Abbas from Gaza.
So with the project stalled and Gaza s borders closed, Khoudary decided to do it on his own. He built a restaurant and cafe (with space for a hotel) and on the same property added the museum. He dubbed the entire complex on the coast near the Shati refugee camp north of Gaza City el Mat haf, Arabic for museum, saying, People here don t hear this word. I want it to enter the vocabulary.
With so little to do in Gaza - factories are closed and the economy is stalled - El Mat haf seems likely to attract huge crowds.
As it happens, the Israel Museum in Jerusalem has just published a catalogue on the Gaza dig of an Israeli team in the 1970s and 80s. Led by the grand dame of Israeli archaeology, Trude Dothan, the dig at Deir El-Balah took place under army guard and uncovered gold jewelers, alabaster vessels and, most important, coffins, all of which are now in the Israel Museum. Some of it had been simply plundered by Moshe Dayan, the defense minister at the time who was an archaeology buff and something of a law unto himself. His collection is now in the Israel Museum as well.
Told of El Mat haf, Dothan said she had long wished there was a museum in Gaza to house what she dug up. Khoudary said he had visited the Israel Museum and hoped that one day some of the Gaza collection could come back to Gaza after we have a qualified government and the capability to protect the heritage of Gaza. Of Dothan he said: She did us a favor, because it would all be gone or destroyed today.
James Snyder, director of the Israel Museum, said that if there were a peaceable state in Gaza and a museum here, I see no reason we couldn t arrange a long-term loan.
Such warm talk between Israelis and Gazans is rare these days. Snyder said that under the current Israeli closing of Gaza, which bars all but humanitarian emergency cases from leaving here, there is the perversity that Gazans today cannot see their own heritage in our museum.
Ethan Bronner is deputy foreign editor of The New York Times. This article is distributed by the Common Ground News Service (CGNews) and can be accessed at www.commongroundnews.org.


Clic here to read the story from its source.