Before
the world witnessed the full force of the Islamic State’s brutality in
the video this past week showing American journalist James Foley’s murder, a different video revealed another kind of destruction the terrorist group is bent on inflicting.
A little more than a minute long, the earlier video
focuses on a large tan building with a graceful minaret rising into the
day’s haze. Ten seconds in, there’s a flash and a loud bang. The
minaret and the building disappear in a plume of smoke. And just like
that, the supposed final resting place of the prophet Jonah — he of the very large fish — was reduced to rubble.
The
Islamic State has been consolidating its fanatical grip on its
conquered lands. Besides the innumerable cruelties the militant group
has meted out, such as the forced expulsions of Christians and other minorities, mass executions and the murder of religious leaders, it also has been destroying Iraq’s cultural heritage wherever its black banners flutter overhead.
Since taking over a chunk of northern and western Iraq
in June, the Islamic State has systematically blown up heritage sites
in and around Mosul, such as the centuries-old shrine to Seth (the third
son of Adam and Eve ), the Prophet Jirjis Mosque and the Awn al-Din
Shrine. An hour’s drive west of Mosul, in the town of Tal Afar, it has demolished at least three Shiite shrines and three mosques.
Iraq’s biblical and historic sites have suffered enormous damage over the past decade of war. For instance, Baghdad’s National Museum
and National Archives were famously looted after the U.S. invasion,
while American troops in 2003-2004 used part of ancient Babylon as a
heliport and fuel reservoir. But the difference is that the Islamic
State makes a deliberate effort to wreck Iraq’s cultural spaces. The
group even brags about it; a recent edition of its English-language
online magazine, Dabiq
, features a photo essay showing many places its fighters have
destroyed in and around Nineveh province. And what the organization
doesn’t bulldoze, it loots; the Sunday Times recently reported that the Islamic State is ransacking archaeological sites and extracting a “tax” on smugglers moving stolen artifacts.
The
Islamic State’s appetite for destruction makes perfect sense. The group
claims to adhere to the Salafist worldview; its members want to return
Islam to what they perceive to be how Muhammad’s first generations of
followers acted and behaved. Salafists explicitly reject
post-7th-century “innovations” concerning behavior and Koranic
interpretation — which, taken to the extreme, means all other forms of
Islamic faith are corrupt and should be expunged. This ideology
underpins the Islamic State’s justification for destroying everything of
cultural consequence in Mosul and elsewhere.
Of course, this is
hardly the first time radicals have delighted in systematically
demolishing a nation’s heritage. The Taliban’s dynamiting of ancient statues of the Buddha
in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, in 2001 is another tragic example. But a
better analogy of cultural destruction on an industrial scale is China
during the Cultural Revolution of 1966-1976. Chinese youth, empowered by
Mao Zedong’s vision of a permanent class struggle, formed Red Guard
units across the country. They were then encouraged to stamp out the
“four olds” from Chinese society: old customs, old habits, old culture
and old thinking.
The Red Guards destroyed temples, mosques,
heritage sites, art and libraries, turning much of the country’s
5,000-year-old culture to ash. Only the intercession of high-ranking
officials could stop the demolitions. For example, the reason Beijing’s
Forbidden City was not greatly damaged is because Premier Zhou Enlai
deployed Chinese troops to protect it.
Throughout
history, we sometimes see small groups rise up to try to halt — or at
least mitigate — the destruction. In Robert Edsel’s book “The Monuments Men”
(and in George Clooney’s movie of the same title), a group of
volunteers comes together to attempt to rescue priceless cultural
artifacts from Nazi ravages during World War II.
Even today,
there are those who seek to preserve civilization from within. When
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and its allies gobbled up half of Mali in 2012, they conquered Timbuktu ,
a city of great Islamic scholarship. AQIM’s fanatics bulldozed several
shrines in the city, and declared that certain centuries-old texts were
unholy and must be put to the torch. But a few librarians and a security
guard decided to risk their lives to move some 28,000 texts from harm’s way, until the Malian government and French paratroopers retook the city in early 2013.
President Obama declared
Wednesday that the United States “will continue to do what we must do
to protect our people” against the Islamic State, and that “we will be
vigilant, and we will be relentless.” But in addition to its campaign of
airstrikes, the United States should quietly identify and assist those
brave enough to try to stem the irredeemable cultural losses being
inflicted in Islamic State-controlled territory. Sadly, it is hard to
save immovable places such as mosques, monasteries, churches, tombs, shrines and archaeological sites — although residents have made efforts
to protect a few places — but we should work with those willing to
spirit whatever artifacts can be saved from the conflict zone. The
administration should also work with the Kurdistan Regional Government,
Turkey and the European Union to house whatever collections can be saved
from the Islamic State’s murderous fanatics. The group is quickly
erasing Iraq’s cultural heritage, with little holding it back.
Iraqi
and Kurdish forces are battling Islamic State fighters to retake two
towns in northern Iraq, after their strategic win of recapturing the
Mosul Dam. (Reuters)
No doubt, it’s a bit
callous to emphasize the rescue of artifacts and items rather than focus
solely on the risks to long-suffering people. Yet for one reason or
another, no political player that can bring overwhelming force to the
table is effectively challenging the Islamic State — not the Sunni
tribes (yet), not the government in Baghdad, not the Iranians and not
the United States, despite our limited air campaign and Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel calling the group “a threat to every stabilized
country on Earth.” So, the Islamic State will tighten its grip on its
territory and continue its pillaging of Iraq’s heritage.
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