Tomb raiders: why does no one care about Cairo’s Egyptian Museum?
Judging by reports from Cairo, the west does not understand that one of the greatest antiquity collections on Earth is in danger If petrol bombs were being thrown in St Marks Square in Venice , or outside the British Museum , what would reports say? We would never stop hearing about the threat to humanity’s cultural heritage. Yet, as I scan the news sites for the latest reports from Cairo, it is strange how little stress has been placed on the unique importance and fragility of the contents of the Egyptian Museum, which stands at the very heart of the unfolding tragedy. That is why I must reiterate my previous attempt to draw attention to this silent witness and victim of events . No, works of art are not people. The violence to protesters who had been so peaceful is nightmarish. But a nightmare scenario is also unfolding for the antiquities of Egypt . As I already stressed earlier this week, the collection of the Egyptian Museum is one of the greatest on Earth. This is where the golden mask of Tutenkamun is kept; the mummies of the pharaohs, and so much more. The image that has haunted me all week is of a very ancient and very spooky tomb statue in the museum: it keeps coming to mind because I have seen nothing like it anywhere else – and because it is made of wood. Old, dry wood. All these treasures could vanish in smoke so easily. My initial assumption was that the western media were downplaying the museum because it seemed less important than the lives at stake and the future to be won. It was even being said that to draw attention to looting was to do the propaganda work of the regime. But now I am starting to wonder if people in the west even know or care what is in that building. It is a great museum. And it is in peril. Museums Egypt Egyptology Protest Hosni Mubarak Egypt Art Sculpture History and history of art Jonathan Jones guardian.co.uk
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Cairo’s Egyptian Museum is documented scientificly. It's built in stone and has sprinkler & fire proof doors. The real problem is out there: excavations get looted, small district museums robbed. No military & no human wall protecting these undocumented testimonials of mankind past. That's the problem!
Kajetan
February 3, 2011 at 1:45 pm
Most undocumented testimonials of Egypts history are in local museums and still in excavations all over the land. These treasures are not guarded by military nor human walls. There are no sprinklers nor fireproof walls. These scientific testimonials are been looted und destroyed, the real historical disaster. The Egyptian Museum in Cairo is a disney land for students and tourist.
Hundhamm
February 3, 2011 at 10:07 pm