Home
   Themes
   Regions
   Tourist Boards
   Services

   Search
   Trips
Home - TheCulturaledTraveler.com

 Current Issue
     Past Issues

  Calendar
Register
  Contact
About

  Submissions

Story Search

Host Reviews

Host Picks

Festivals 

Heritage Sites

Museums

National Parks

Editorials

Inside CT

CulturalTravels.com - Home More Heritage Sites

Volume 3, June 2001

ISSN 1538-893X

Heritage Site of the Month

 Sheri Leigh, Publisher

This Issue

Cultural Snapshots

"You Should Marry My Husband"
Silk Road & Magic Carpets
 

4 Host of the Month

4 Museum Pick
4 Festival Pick
 

UNESCO Site

The World Heritage Committee has inscribed 721 properties on the World Heritage List (554 cultural, 144 natural and 23 mixed in 124 States Parties).    The List, arranged alphabetically by nominating State Party, is current as of December 2001. The list will be updated following the next meeting of the Committee in June 2002. The complete list is at UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

A UNESCO World Heritage Site

A Modern Barbarism
Destroys an Ancient Wonder
 

Carved out of sandstone cliffs, this statue was 51 meters (167 feet) high.

Every month we highlight one of the 690 locations worldwide that UNESCO has declared World Heritage Sites since 1972. World Heritage Sites are natural formations and cultural artifacts (ancient cities, ruins, works of art) that because of their natural or historical  significance are regarded as treasures to be preserved intact for all time in the name of humanity.

Not every significant site is on the World Heritage list. That is why it is such a sad thing to have to comment on the malign destruction of one of the world’s greatest cultural treasures, the 1,300-year-old Bamiyan Buddhas of central Afghanistan, destroyed by artillery fire in March by the Taliban. Taliban is the army of teenage barbarians that has plunged Afghanistan into a dark age with its deadly parody of Islam, built upon an ignorance so willfully deep that it has replaced Allah as Taliban’s god.

In many ways, Taliban is the descendent of all the other barbarians who destroyed what their ideologies could not fathom or abide: the Vandals and Huns as they sacked the Roman Empire; Stalin’s destruction of churches; Mao’s Cultural Revolution; Pol Pot’s razing of schools and cities; Hitler’s book burnings and desecration of synagogues.

Some people might argue that sovereignty is so sacred a concept that a government can destroy whatever artifacts or monuments it wants. That may be, although a better case would be made for Taliban’s sovereignty if it were a legitimate government freely chosen by the will of its people. But it is not. It rules by threat of quick death and it has already enslaved half of its subjects – women – as vassals under a permanent, virtual house arrest.

But beyond considerations of what those in power can claim to have rightful control over is the simple recognition that anybody who maliciously uproots and destroys the past is no friend of free thought. In Orwell’s 1984, one of the Party’s slogans was “He who controls the past controls the future.” In their own primitive way, Taliban’s thugs understand this: If you can remove memories of a better or different time, your subjects can be brought to believe that your regime is the best that has ever been.

The brighter side to this is that virtually no government agreed with Taliban’s savagery. For a few days the world was treated to the spectacle of nations from every corner of the globe condemning Taliban’s actions. Iraq stood with the United States, Israel stood with China, Argentina stood with Great Britain against the vandalism.

That spontaneous international unity was a sign that at least in some matters, people worldwide agree on a common humanity and the need to protect significant artifacts and wild places.
Patrick Totty

Privacy - Terms & Conditions

To receive a FREE email version of our monthly newsletter just fill in the Key Interest form