Saturday 5 September 2015

Washing the dust from our souls: the war on culture

Re-watching the footage of Dubrovnik’s Old Town crumbling under a barrage of Yugoslav artillery fire in 1991, it seems strangely barbaric.  During the 1980s, Croatia’s Dalmatian coast, incorporating the turquoise Adriatic, romantic islands and endless sunshine, was a popular holiday destination for tourists from across Europe.  The historic and picturesque towns of Split and Dubrovnik, whose walled city stretching into the sea was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1979, were eerily familiar to the public watching the war unfold on their television screens.  Tragically for the thousands who had lost their lives earlier in the Croatian War of Independence, it was this act of cultural barbarity that drew the strongest censure from other nations around the world.

In the war that followed in neighbouring Bosnia, the shelling of Mostar’s famous Stari Most attracted similar criticism.  Hundreds of Mosques, Catholic and Orthodox churches were destroyed during the course of the Bosnian War, in an effort to obliterate the religions and cultures of the warring parties.

There is much sentiment invested in historic sites; the fact that they have stood for so long and witnessed many lives pass through them and around them makes their destruction entirely symbolic, serving no strategic military purpose.  In the case of Mostar’s Stari Most, there were several more modern road bridges over the river that were left untouched.

In the last two weeks, news has filtered through of the destruction of the ruins of Palmyra in Syria.  The site contains the ruins of a city once considered one of the most important cultural centres of the ancient world.  The labyrinth of buildings and monuments, demonstrating a broad range of architectural styles, drew over 150,000 visitors a year before the Syrian conflict began.  The former chief archaeologist at the site, Khaled al-Assad, was beheaded by Islamic State (IS) militants in August for refusing to cooperate in assisting them to find hidden treasures at Palmyra.  He was willing to die to protect Syria’s cultural heritage.


IS know exactly what message they are sending when they blow up sites like Palmyra.  They have similarly rampaged through the heritage sites of Iraq.  Many Shiite mosques, tombs and shrines have been looted and destroyed, as well as numerous ancient and medieval sites and artefacts, including the ancient cities of Nimrud and Hatra, parts of the wall of Nineveh, the ruins of Bash Tapia Castle and artefacts from the Mosul Museum.  Such is the alarm at the work of IS that UNESCO Directo-General Irina Bokova launched the Unite4Heritage campaign in March this year.  Her aim was to create a global movement “to protect and safeguard heritage in areas where it is threatened by extremists.”

The destruction of cultural heritage is classified as a war crime and IS actions have been condemned by the UN General Assembly and Security Council.  The demolition of cultural icons and buildings in war is considered such a grave crime because the deliberate targeting of history, along with other symbolic acts such as book burning and the damaging of art, represents the destruction of ideas and identity – the things that make us human; the things that embody our freedom of speech and freedom of expression.  This is what makes them such effective weapons of war.

Although the history itself will be lost forever, the rebuilding of these sites when wars are over can be equally powerful symbols of reconciliation.  In 2004, the Stari Most was rebuilt, having been painstakingly restored using original methods.  It now attracts as many visitors as ever.  Last year, Bosnia’s National Library in Sarajevo, destroyed during the siege of 1992-5, was reopened, to much celebration.

So why, when Bosnians are celebrating the reopening of their library as a symbol of their resilience and rehabilitation, are our local authorities closing ours?  Why, if our cultural heritage is so sacred, is it the first thing to go when budget cuts are required?  Why is our government cutting funding to the arts, museums and higher education?  Why is there talk of dismantling one of the icons of our cultural heritage, the BBC?  Why are the arts taking such a backseat in education?  It is commonly accepted that ages of cultural enlightenment coincide with eras of political advancement.  The Ancient Greeks had Plato and Aristotle; the Elizabethans had Shakespeare; and the Industrial Revolution, the greatest period of political advancement in history, boasted the broadest and most influential range of political philosophers, artists and writers that the world has ever seen.

It can only be hoped that this Conservative government will wake up to the damage it is inflicting to our own cultural heritage before it is too late.  They will ultimately find that, like packing an ancient temple full of dynamite, repressing the arts is entirely futile.  IS can rampage across the Middle East, demolishing historic temples and archaeological sites, but out of their ruins, we have to believe, will rise new monuments that will stand for thousands more years because ideas and identity can never truly be destroyed.  Human nature - or so I like to think - is tougher than that.