Islamic State fighters destroy priceless statues and relics

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
35,861
3,042
113
Islamic State fighters destroy priceless statues and relics
Isabel Coles and Saif Hameed, Reuters
First posted: Thursday, February 26, 2015 11:15 AM EST | Updated: Thursday, February 26, 2015 02:22 PM EST
ARBIL/BAGHDAD - Ultra-radical Islamist militants in northern Iraq have destroyed a priceless collection of statues and sculptures from the ancient Assyrian era, inflicting what an archaeologist described as incalculable damage to a piece of shared human history.
A video published by Islamic State on Thursday showed men attacking the artifacts, some of them identified as antiquities from the 7th century BC, with sledgehammers and drills, saying they were symbols of idolatry.
"The Prophet ordered us to get rid of statues and relics, and his companions did the same when they conquered countries after him," an unidentified man said in the video.
The smashed articles appeared to come from an antiquities museum in Mosul, the northern city which was overrun by Islamic State last June, a former employee at the museum told Reuters.
The militants shoved stone statues off their plinths, shattering them on the floor, and one man applied an electric drill to a large winged bull. The video showed a large exhibition room strewn with dismembered statues, and Islamic songs played in the background.
Lamia al-Gailani, an Iraqi archaeologist and associate fellow at the London-based Institute of Archaeology, said the militants had wreaked untold damage. "It's not only Iraq's heritage: it's the whole world's," she said.
"They are priceless, unique. It's unbelievable. I don't want to be Iraqi any more," she said, comparing the episode to the dynamiting of the Bamiyan Buddhas by the Afghan Taliban in 2001.
As well as Assyrian statues of winged bulls from the Mesopotamian cities of Nineveh and Nimrud, Gailani said the Islamic State hardliners appeared to have destroyed statues from Hatra, a Hellenistic-Parthian city in northern Iraq dating back around 2,000 years.
Eleanor Robson, professor of Ancient Near Eastern History at University College London, also said on Twitter that statues from Hatra and Nineveh had been wrecked, though she added that some objects shown in the video were modern replicas.
The director of UNESCO's Iraq office, Axel Plathe, would not comment on the content of the video, saying it has yet to be verified. But he described the damage to Iraq's heritage since Islamic State overran Mosul last year as an attempt "to destroy the identity of an entire people".
Plathe said UNESCO was working with Iraqi authorities and governments of neighbouring countries to crack down on the smuggling of artifacts from areas under Islamic State control, and had alerted auction houses to be on the lookout for stolen items.
Islamic State espouses a fiercely purist school of Sunni Islam, deeming many other Muslims to be heretics. Its fighters have destroyed Shi'ite and Sufi religious sites and attacked churches and other shrines in the parts of Syria and Iraq under their control.
"Muslims, these relics you see behind me are idols that were worshipped other than God in the past centuries," the unidentified man in the Islamic State video said.
"What is known as Assyrians, Akkadians and others used to worship gods of rain, farming and war other than God and pay all sorts of tributes to them."
Last week, Islamic State released another video showing a pile of books in flames.
An employee of the Mosul museum said he feared these books were manuscripts from the library of endowments, although the library itself was still in tact last week.
A video published online appears to show Islamist militants destroying a collection of priceless statues and sculptures dating to the ancient Assyrian era.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0GYd-rmr2Y
Islamic State fighters destroy priceless statues and relics | Watch the video |
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
210
63
In the bush near Sudbury
ISIS keeps revealing itself to be the Planet of the Apes.

Question: What does The Prophet have to say about social media, driving machines and life in the 21st century?
 
Last edited:

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
ISIS keeps revealing itself to be the Planet of the Apes.

Question: What does The Prophet have to say about social media, driving machines and life in the 21st century?


This in stark contrast to Ayatollah Khomeini who declared that ancient Assyrian relics (such as the ziggurats) in his country were to be preserved as part of their cultural, not religious, heritage. If Mohammed wanted these things to be destroyed he would have said so in his time but did not.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
21,513
65
48
Minnesota: Gopher State
Sunni sure have but Khomeini is Shiia.

Christian Serbians destroyed the Oriental Institute and Bosnian National Library which contained many Muslim and other ancient writings which were priceless.






Such actions whether committed by Christians or Muslims are barbarities.