Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

These places were once tourists heavens…untill taliban came along. :frowning:

Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift | Fox News

JAHANABAD, Pakistan – When the Taliban blew the face off a towering, 1,500-year-old rock carving of Buddha in northwest Pakistan almost five years ago, it fell to an intrepid Italian archaeologist to come to the rescue.

Thanks to the efforts of Luca Olivieri and his partners, the 6-meter (nearly 20-foot)-tall image near the town of Jahanabad is getting a facelift, and many other archaeological treasures in the scenic Swat Valley are being excavated and preserved.

Hard-line Muslims have a history of targeting Buddhist, Hindu and other religious sites they consider heretical to Islam. Six months before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, the Taliban shocked the world by dynamiting a pair of 1,500-year-old Buddhist statues in central Afghanistan.

The Jahanabad Buddha, etched high on a huge rock face in the 6th or 7th century, is one of the largest such carvings in South Asia. It was attacked in the fall of 2007 when the Pakistani Taliban swarmed across the scenic Swat Valley. The army drove most of them out two years later, but foreign tourists who used to visit the region still tend to stay away.

Olivieri himself had to leave in 2008 after more than two decades of tending to the riches dating back to Alexander the Great and the Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim invaders who followed. The 49-year-old head of the Italian Archaeological Mission in Pakistan returned in 2010 and is back at work.

Taliban militants climbed ropes to insert explosives in holes drilled into the face and shoulders of the Jahanabad Buddha, said Olivieri. The explosives in the shoulders failed to detonate, but the others blew off most of the face above the lips and cracked other parts of the carving and surrounding rock.

Olivieri and his team began work this month on fixing the cracks and what’s left of the face. A full reconstruction is impossible because detailed documentation and fragments of the face are lacking.

“Whatever you do in the absence of perfect data is a fake,” said Olivieri, who says he has wanted to be an archaeologist since age 6 and still brings a youthful exuberance to his work even as his beard grows gray.

Arriving as a university student in 1987, he was fascinated by Swat, once an important center of Buddhist culture and trade. The monk credited with introducing Buddhism to Tibet, Padmasambhava, was born in Swat.

In more recent decades, the area was known as “the Switzerland of Pakistan,” popular with religious tourists from China, Japan and South Korea, and the hope is that restoration of the Jahanabad Buddha will spark a revival of tourism here.

Olivieri’s mission is funded by the Italian government, which works with local Pakistani antiquities authorities. It has uncovered over 120 Buddhist sites among Swat’s soaring hills and rushing rivers. Of roughly 200 Buddhist rock carvings in Swat, the Jahanabad Buddha was among the few to survive with its face intact for so long, said Olivieri. Most were defaced centuries ago by Muslim invaders who, like the Taliban, consider Buddha a false idol.

Maulana Shamsur Rehman, a leading Islamist politician in Swat, says the attack on the Buddha should never have happened. Islam preaches freedom and protection for followers of all religions, he told The Associated Press, and “in line with Islamic rules, nobody should have an objection to the repair work on the Buddha statue.”

In 2001, militants damaged the excavated ruins of a 7th century Hindu temple in Swat overlooking a stronghold conquered by Alexander in the 4th century B.C. Unable to protect the temple, the Italian mission had to rebury it.

Ironically, the site that Olivieri was most worried about during the Taliban’s violent reign in Swat was an Islamic one — the roughly 1,000-year-old Udegram Ghaznavid mosque, the third oldest in Pakistan. He feared the militants would occupy and damage it, but that never happened.

Pakistani security officials say the Taliban are again trying to infiltrate Swat, but militants are not the only threat to the archaeological sites. Looters are perhaps a bigger problem. Many relics looted from Swat are in private and public collections around the world.

In December police arrested several men in Swat and seized a roughly one-meter-(three-foot) tall, 1,800-year-old Buddhist statue that could have fetched tens of thousands of dollars on the international antiquities market.

The Italian mission has posted guards at the most important sites and is also training them to become guides by teaching them English, first aid and basic conservation techniques, said Olivieri.

The mission opened in 1955 in an office provided by the Wali of Swat, the one-time princely ruler of the territory. To furnish a taste of home, its first draftsman painted a mural of Rome’s Spanish Steps in the dining room.

The feeling of glimpsing Italy in the wilds of Pakistan’s northwest continues today. There’s espresso in the morning and Italian olive oil on the dining room table. A Fiat Campagnola jeep shipped from Italy in 1955 is due to end up in a museum in Swat.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

Who can ask the jaahils to leave the historical heritage aside, there's no budhist now who will worship those statues. But its important to keep our heritage alive.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

I used to have the view that these statues are of no concern to my people so we dont care for them and would not mind if they were not there...

However over time I have come to realise that such an attitude that treats others like lesser beings or does not truly care for all mankind is against the principals of Islam just as much as Idolatory in itself.

So we must think of these as ours or anyone elses but merely a part of the Land, left by people who came this way before us, we have no right to judge them or they to judge us. Live and let live you might say.

They are as much a part of hisotry as my people so it is better for all to be free and exists as one. No one should dominate others for selfish needs and only the ones who upset the true peace that is universal are the ones who should be punished.

Therefore the Taliban are just as much an enemy now as Nato. Both are bad for the land its people and humanity.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

if we think logically why has Allah preserved Egyptian mummies of pharoahs, and the pyramids. Its mentioned in Quran that these are all reminders/signs for the people to come in the future, so by harming these reminders are we doing any favour to the religion? I dont think so.
**
"What, now! When previously you rebelled and were one of the corrupters? Today we will preserve your body so you can be a Sign for people who come after you. Surely many people are heedless of Our Signs." (Qur'an, 10:91-92)**

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

^ Good point to make.

It is important that while we remember these things we need to teach coming generations that they must not become blind with hatred. It is hard for many to relate to but I trod the path of hatred for a long part of my life. It is shamefull that in those dark days it was easier for young men like me who had nothing better to look forward to, that we fell into the hands of those with extreme views. They used our hatred to channel it against innocent people and the fact our hatred blinded us from everything else led us to cause much grief to others and ourselves.

Millitants are not bad people by nature they are like Iron, they come from the ground like simple stones, men hammer them into the form of weapons and use them for ill gains. We must not forget that iron can also be used to make the plough and to build the steel for industry and homes.

We need to teach ourselves the value of life before we seek out to protect it, one can win a battle against those who harm us without the need to resort to the same levels as those who come at us with swords... when the time comes you may ride out and face them but only if you have something worth fighting for in the first place.

Our desperate people need to be given some hope and a cause worth really fighting for the hard fight is to tame your heart and mind, to tame the land on which you live only then can you defend these things from the invader... if blind hatred is all you have you will destroy yourselves alo9ng with everything else.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

True. Myself and other muslims I know were brought up knowing that islam forbids the destruction of or mocking of others beliefs, their religious texts and statues and places of worship and that even harming anothers religious leader, even during war is forbidden. One of the reasons being that on the day of judgement god will use these and ask people why they worshipped them (statues) or held such beliefs etc... amongst other reasons.

But I guess human nature is such that people will disobey these commands and make up their own justifications. Also we must not fall into the same hatred as those who destroy mosques and burn qurans.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

thousands of antiquities(included 100's of buddha statues) were removed from the Swat Buddhist Museum, before the operation against militants started in 2008 and I remember last year all of them were brought back to the museum. Pakistani archaeologists should do something to preserve our heritage sites.

good thing is at a slower pace, But Alhumdulilah Swat has recovered alot, peace has returned, but there is alot of work which needs to be done, rebuilt houses/school etc
there is an awesome website by the name of Swat I think, which is doing a fantastic job in promoting Tourism, they even made a lovely video on Swat.

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

The greatest tragedies of human history of recent times have been the emergence of fundamentalists with twisted ideologies. Taliban have been one of the most prominent ones. It was not enough to kill people who did not adhere to their views or stop girls from attending schools, they had to go and destroy and deface the history and cultural heritage of the land. The rock carved Buddha statues have been part of the landscape for centuries. They reflect the rich heritage of the land. These stone carvings were not being worshiped by any people but were homage to the people who lived there once and their craftsmanship. Even at the request of the world communities including the Muslim world, the Taliban went ahead and destroyed what was preserved as history for centuries.

Are we not identified by our heritage and by our culture? These people wanted to destroy anything and everything that had been dear to a common man. For them, it is not about taking lives but taking the soul as well. This is the reason we have been advocating that all parties concerned have to work together and neutralize the evil forces of fundamentalism, so our lives and our history and heritage can be preserved for coming generations.

LTC T.G. Taylor
DET-United States Central Command
www.centcom.mil/ur

Re: Pakistan: Buddha attacked by Taliban gets facelift

[QUOTE]
The greatest tragedies of human history of recent times have been the emergence of fundamentalists
[/QUOTE]

That applies to the same Fundamentalist nuttjobs in all countries. American has plenty of its own dirty laundry as does Saudi Arabia but you dont hear a bad word spoken about them, please if your going to be the world police on these matters make your homeland just as secure before crusading around the world trying to impose "democracy".