The brutal murder of
Syrian archaeologist Khaled Asaad – beheaded and, according to some reports,
crucified at the site of ancient Palmyra to which he had devoted much of his
professional life, has to give pause to any archaeologist’s train of thought.
It certainly does mine.
I didn’t know Mr. Asaad,
but I grieve for him, his family and colleagues, and honor his memory. Especially because, according to
news reports, he was killed by “people” of the self-styled Islamic State
because he refused to tell them where some of Palmyra’s archaeological
treasures are hidden. I hope his colleagues show similar resolve, but escape
similar fates. I hope I would be as honorable as he if I found myself in his
situation.
Mr. Asaad’s murder, and
the “Islamic State’s” other depredations, bring two memories bubbling up in my
mind, products of my very marginal acquaintance with the Middle East.
The first: my family and
I were visiting a madrassa in Cairo. I sat quietly on the courtyard pavement
and watched the students – young kids in tunics and skullcaps – at their
lessons. Which involved monotonic recitations from the Koran, accompanied by rhythmic
bows toward Mecca. Our Egyptian hostess said that this was essentially the sum
total of the madrassa’s curriculum.
The second: I was
walking along a street in a toney, upscale part of Istanbul, near Taksim
Square, and was startled by the shop windows. Turkey at the time was pushing
for membership in the European Union, and the windows could have graced stores
in any of that continent’s major cities. Americans are prudes compared to Europeans;
even the most ordinary consumer product in Europe seems to be hawked by fashion
models in breathtakingly pornographic poses. The same rampant sexuality was on
display there in Istanbul. Even as a fairly worldly if elderly American I felt
a bit put off by its in-your-face character, and I had to wonder how the
grizzled, vested Turkish men and chador-clad women on the street felt about the
spectacle. And I thought (this was somewhat before the Arab Spring) that this
east-west dialogue (monologue?) might not end well.
These vignettes
associate themselves in my mind with the murder of Mr. Asaad because I,
probably like almost everyone else on this continent, wonder what on earth
could make people engage in the seemingly gratuitous violence in which ISIS
indulges. And I think: suppose the only education you’ve had comprises mindless
memorization and recitation from the Koran – much of which, to judge from what
little I’ve read in translation, deals with the Prophet’s struggles to rid the
Kaaba and then all Arabia of idolaters. Believers are encouraged to do terrible
things to unrepentant idolaters, and if that old man who takes care of all those pagan
statues at Palmyra isn’t an idolater, what on earth is he? Yes, there’s a
horrible logic to it.
So how to combat it?
Facebook is awash with calls for strong action – send in the Marines, bomb the
bastards back to the Stone Age. But we’ve been there, done that, and it hasn’t
worked out too well. And except for their RPGs and Humvees and Twitter-savvy,
the followers of ISIS are already in the Stone Age (the Neolithic, anyhow);
they’d hardly notice.
Surely one should start
with the madrassas. Somehow break up the pedagogical monopoly exercised by
ill-educated clerics whose curricula are limited to the words of the Prophet
and their choice of early Imams; give kids access to the broader world, a wider
range of ideas, and maybe their blind adherence to medieval prejudice can be
broken. Maybe the internet can do this; maybe we should be distributing iPads
across the Arab World.
But to open minds you’ve
got to open eyes, and eyes that are offended by what they understand to be visual proofs of the outside world’s depravity – like those shop windows in
Istanbul – will tend to be closed. Or open only to hazard guilty glances that
make the viewer feel unclean, needing to expiate his sins by, say, beheading an
idolater. We need, in short, to exercise some restraint, some self-awareness,
imagine ourselves in the slippers of those kids in the madrassa, and find ways
to reach them.
I’m only ten years
younger than Mr. Asaad, and utterly lack Middle Eastern credentials; I can't do anything about the situation and suppose I’m being presumptuous even
to expound on it. But I do grieve for Mr. Asaad, and for Palmyra, and for all
the other archaeologists and sites over which ISIS exercises power. And for
those poor, brain-deadened madrassa kids, one of whom probably took his knife
to Mr. Asaad’s throat. I wish there were SOMETHING we could do.
2 comments:
I was sickened when I read of his murder. Keep in mind that the madrassas are operated by our allies. We are pouring fuel on that fire.
Yes it is sad to hear of all this beyond horror going on. Khaled Asaad was known to many of a good man who contribute to the world the knowledge of Palmyra. He gave up his life so the contents of the site would remain with the world. I never knew about him, I wish I did and I am sad that I had to learn about this man in this kind of manner. Now I will sure remember him for the rest of my life.
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