Housed for seven years in the Museum-in-Exile in Switzerland, the
collection Afghan cultural artefacts has returned in its place of
origin: the National Museum of Afghanistan. But efforts are still needed
to return a museum plundered and devastated by war to its ancient glory.
Isolated on the southwestern outskirts of Kabul, in the burned and
pockmarked Darulaman Palace, an iconic image of the Soviet occupation
and Afghanistan’s brutal civil war, sits the National Museum of
Afghanistan. Two stone inscriptions on the gates greet visitors, one in
English, the other in Dari: “A nation stays alive when its culture stays
alive.”
Walking through the halls of the National Museum, amidst the stretch of
empty spaces, there is a palpable sense of excitement. Since the fall of
the Taliban in 2001, UNESCO has organized and coordinated efforts to
transform the museum from a dilapidated, bombed-out state to a
fully-functioning cultural institution. The walls are freshly painted
blue and white, and workers move about diligently plastering holes and
fixing doors.
Flanking the main staircase to the second floor are two display cases
with several seated Bodhisattva statues, representations of Buddhist
enlightenment, from the 4th-6th century AD, still under a plastic tarp.
On the first landing, behind a locked door, is an impressive room full
of carved wooden statues from Nuristan in northern Afghanistan. Two
figures—a man and a woman—atop a wooden staff, locked in an embrace
speak to Afghanistan’s rich past. And perhaps to its future.
But most of the displays are empty. In 1988, 41,000 pieces from the
museum, including the famous Bactrian gold treasure, were transferred to
a secure location under the Presidential Palace. The rest of the
collection was looted in the 1990s during the fight for control of Kabul
following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan.
An alternative museum in exile
In 1998, in response to the continued destruction and looting of the
country, the Northern Alliance and Taliban together asked Paul Bucherer,
Director of the Foundation Biblioteca Afghanica in Switzerland, to help
establish a museum in exile. Since October, 2000, the Afghanistan
Museum-In-Exile, established in Bubendorf, Switzerland under an
agreement with UNESCO, became a repository for gathering scattered
pieces of Afghanistan’s cultural heritage.
“Even members of the Taliban have brought instruments here, which they
got from their parents. They didn’t want to destroy them,” says Bucherer
while packing the collection into boxes for the transfer to Kabul.
Over the past six years, the collection has grown to approximately 1,400
archeological pieces and ethnographic works—including carpets, jewelry,
chests and musical instruments—donated mostly from private collectors.
In September 2006, UNESCO agreed to a request from the Afghan Government
to repatriate these objects to the restored National Museum.
“It is a good beginning,” says Omara Khan Masoudi, Director-General at
the National Museum, who is organizing an exposition of the artifacts in
Kabul later this spring. “I hope other countries that have objects
looted from the museum can help us return these pieces.”
In 2003, Masoudi visited the Museum-in-Exile and recognized four objects
that had been looted from the National Museum. The National Museum’s
ethnographic collection was also destroyed in the 1990s, so Masoudi
welcomes the ethnographic objects from the Museum-In-Exile as an
important step in rebuilding the collection.
“During the 30 years of war, half of the population of Afghanistan was
driven into exile and lost their belongings,” say Bucherer. “They know
their culture only through the stories of their parents and
grandparents. At least half of the objects you no longer find in
Afghanistan. Since the shops and tools were also destroyed, the Afghans
need these objects as a pattern to renovate and make new ones, they are
necessary to help rebuild the consciousness of the country.”
The time is right
With an increasing number of Taliban attacks in the south marking the
beginning of a spring offensive, returning the objects to the National
Museum is not without risk. But Masoudi is convinced the time is right
because “the security is better in Kabul.”
Masoudi sees the return of the objects from the Museum-in-Exile as a
first step in a long process. “It is difficult, but the objects in our
museum are very famous, everybody knows the pieces belong to the
National Museum in Afghanistan.”
“It is the decision of the Afghan government,” says Shigeru Aoyagi,
Director of UNESCO’s Kabul office. “We are supporting the government by
helping build the cultural institutions.”
Aoyagi’s priorities are scheduling a major conference on the protection
of artifacts* and helping the Ministry develop a comprehensive cultural
policy.
“There needs to be external intervention to create a sense of pride,” he
says. “Afghanistan’s diversity needs a show of strength to demonstrate
the richness of the country. UNESCO’s role is vital in this process.”
“Culture is the central to the development of a peaceful democracy and
can help unify people,” he adds. “It can say: this is Afghanistan, our
plight, our people.”
* The second conference of the International Coordination Committee for
the Protection of Artifacts, a session of the International Coordination
Committee for the Safeguarding of Afghanistan Cultural Heritage
