MEMS Colloquium Lecture: ISIS and Cultural Cleansing
Saving the Ancient and Medieval Treasures of Syria and Iraq
Location
Library and Gallery, Albin O. Kuhn
Date & Time
March 7, 2017, 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm
Description
MEMS COLLOQUIUM LECTURE
Michael D. Danti,
Assistant Professor of Archaeology, Boston University; Consulting
Scholar, University of Pennsylvania Museum; and Fellow of the Society of
Antiquaries of London
Syria
and Iraq are facing the worst cultural heritage crisis since the Second
World War. Michael Danti's talk will address one of the greatest
challenges: the cultural cleansing perpetrated by the so-called Islamic
State (or ISIS) and the work of the American Schools of Oriental
Research to safeguard cultural assets.
The
American Schools of Oriental Research Cultural Heritage Initiatives
(ASOR CHI) work with Syrians and Iraqis to safeguard cultural sites and
objects from neglect, damage, destruction, and theft as part of a
program developed with the U.S. Department of State. Among the many
atrocities perpetrated by ISIS is the deliberate destructions of
historic mosques, churches, schools, monasteries, and cemeteries, as
well as numerous famous monuments at archaeological sites such as
Palmyra, Nimrud, Nineveh, Hatra, and the Old City of Mosul. ISIS
brazenly commits these war crimes to advance its radical ideology and
gain global media exposure. At the same time, the organization funds its
terrorist activities through the looting of cultural property from
archaeological sites, museums, libraries, and private collections.
Irreplaceable ancient and medieval heritage, embedded in the urban
fabric and daily life of modern communities, is endangered as extremists
erase cultural memory, manipulate cultural identity, and eliminate
cultural diversity.
Bio:
Michael D. Danti
is an archaeologist who specializes in the ancient Near East. His
interests center on the emergence of complex societies, agropastoral
economies, tribe-state relations and pastoral nomadic societies. He
directs archaeological projects in Iraqi Kurdistan and Syria, focusing
on the Bronze and Iron Ages. From 1991 to 2010, Dr. Danti’s research
focused on the Early Bronze Age site of Tell es-Sweyhat near Raqqa and
Aleppo on the Euphrates River. He is a principal investigator for the
American Schools of Oriental Research's Cultural Heritage Initiatives
(ASOR CHI). ASOR is an international, collaborative effort to respond to
the destruction of cultural heritage in Syria and northern Iraq. Groups
of concerned citizens in Syria and Iraq have been taking action, and
ASOR's international team has formed alliances and partnerships with
these groups.
