U.N.-led group assessing Babylon
Ancient city was damaged during ’03 invasion of Iraq
BABYLON, Iraq – It was one of the world’s first, greatest cities – a place where astronomers mapped the stars millennia ago and kings created an early code of law and planted what became known as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
Yet little remains of the ancient capital, as seen by the Associated Press during a trip to Babylon last month. The site has the aura of a theme park touched by the ambition of dictator Saddam Hussein and the opportunism of looters: Modern walkways run beside crumbling old walls, a reconstructed Greek theater and a palace built for Saddam atop an artificial hill.
Now, for the first time, global institutions led by the U.N. are thoroughly documenting the damage and how to fix it. A UNESCO report due out early next year will cite Saddam’s construction but focus, at the Iraqi government’s request, on damage done by U.S. forces from April to September 2003, and the Polish troops deployed there for more than a year afterward.
The U.S., which turned Babylon into a military base, says the looting would have been worse but for the troops’ presence. The U.S. also says it will help rehabilitate Babylon, funding an effort by the World Monuments Fund and Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, but has yet to release precise funding figures.
Archaeologists hope the effort will lead someday to new digging to follow up on the excavations done by a German team in the early 1900s.
“The site is tremendously important,” said Gaetano Palumbo of the New York City-based World Monuments Fund. Yet in its present state, Babylon is “hardly understandable, as a place where so much happened in history.”
For decades, Babylon has been virtually off-limits to the world whose culture it helped create.
First came Saddam’s attempt to create a major tourist attraction aimed at glorifying his own image, which led to shoddy reconstruction of ancient sites and construction of restaurants and other facilities in the 1980s.
Babylon suffered in the chaotic days after Saddam’s downfall in 2003, at roughly the same time that Baghdad’s national museum was looted.
During the occupation by U.S. and Polish troops in 2003 and 2004, heavy vehicles and machinery pounded on ancient brick and on sand rich with pottery and other fragments. Military forces built a helipad, carved out parking areas and trenches and destroyed part of an ancient brick road called the Processional Way.
Even as Babylon was damaged, there has been no extensive, large-scale archaeological work here in nearly a century.
There is no trace of the Hanging Gardens, said to have been built for the homesick wife of King Nebuchadnezzar II, or the tower believed to have inspired the Bible’s tale of Babel. The city’s symbol – the original Gate of Ishtar named for a Babylonian goddess and built by Nebuchadnezzar – is in Berlin’s Pergamon Museum.
A spell of relative peace in Iraq is giving Babylon a second chance. However, tremendous challenges remain.
There is still little security or infrastructure at Babylon or at most of Iraq’s 12,000 other archaeological sites. Looting across Iraq appears to have eased, at least temporarily.
But the country has only 1,500 police who guard the sites to prevent looting. Many areas remain too dangerous for visitors or scholars, and some fear heavier violence could resume.
Although Iraq’s government is involved in the projectthe government has more pressing priorities. And it could take years for Babylon to get on UNESCO’s list of World Heritage sites.
John Curtis, keeper of the Middle East collections at the British Museum and a contributor to the upcoming UNESCO report, was one of the first to discover and document the post-invasion damage to Babylon in December 2004. Four years later, he says it’s a great step that UNESCO is ready to sign off on a document, but that infrastructure and stability will be key to any new exploration.
“You need to have a large team,” Curtis said. “It would be a great mistake to rush into excavations without appropriate resources at hand.”