Gaza’s archeological finds rescued ahead of Israeli strike

Gaza’s archeological finds rescued ahead of Israeli strike


People observe the archaeological site of Saint Hilarion near Deir el-Balah in the centre of the Gaza Strip, on June 8, 2022.

Nearly three decades of archeological finds in Gaza were hurriedly evacuated on Thursday, September 11, from a Gaza City building threatened by an Israeli strike, an official in charge of the antiquities told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“This was a high-risk operation, carried out in an extremely dangerous context for everyone involved − a real last-minute rescue,” said Olivier Poquillon, director of the French Biblical and Archeological School of Jerusalem (EBAF), whose storehouse housed the relics.

On Wednesday morning, Israeli authorities ordered EBAF − one of the oldest academic institutions in the region − to evacuate its archeological storehouse located on the first floor of a residential tower in Gaza City that was due to be targeted.

The Israeli army did not confirm the warning when asked by AFP, but several sources said France, UNESCO and the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem played a key role in securing a brief reprieve that allowed most of the artifacts to be removed.

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“With almost no international actors left on the ground, no infrastructure, nothing functioning, we had to improvise transport, labor and logistics,” said Poquillon.

The evacuation, he added, was carried out in strict secrecy, with “the overriding concern, as a religious organization, of not endangering human lives,” as the Israeli military pressed operations in the territory’s largest urban hub.

The depot contained around 180 cubic meters of finds from Gaza’s five main archeological sites, including the fourth-century Saint Hilarion Monastery, listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site. All of these sites have been damaged, EBAF said, expressing concern about “unique” mosaics left exposed despite their fragility.

‘Only trace’

Poquillon said Gaza has “an extremely ancient heritage, very precious for the region, showing the succession and coexistence of peoples, cultures and religions.” Of Gaza’s two museums, one has been destroyed and the other heavily damaged since the war erupted nearly two years ago. Researchers told AFP that aside from scattered ruins highly vulnerable to bombardment, the EBAF storehouse was the only significant repository of artifacts left in the Palestinian territory.

The rediscovery of Gaza’s past began in the wake of the 1993 Oslo Accords. Two years later, the newly created Gaza antiquities service opened its first archeological dig in cooperation with EBAF, unearthing remnants of the ancient Greek port of Anthedon and a Roman necropolis.

Excavations stalled after Hamas seized power in 2007 and Israel imposed a blockade, resuming years later with support from the British Council and French NGO Première Urgence Internationale (PUI). Now, with Israel contemplating a full takeover of Gaza and ceasefire talks stalled, archeologists say prospects for renewed excavations are remote.

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UNESCO, which has already identified damage to 94 heritage sites in Gaza using satellite images, including the 13th-century Pasha’s Palace, has not yet been able to take a full inventory. “We saved a large part, but in a rescue you always lose things, and you always face painful choices,” said René Elter, an archeologist affiliated with EBAF and scientific coordinator for PUI.

The depot, he said, was especially valuable because collections had been classified systematically. “Many items have been broken or lost, but they have been photographed or drawn, so the scientific information is preserved,” Elter said. “Perhaps that will be the only trace that remains of Gaza’s archeology − in books, publications, libraries.”

Le Monde with AFP

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