Treasure is Mixed Blessing
Posted: Sat Nov 29, 2003 9:07 pm
Chicago Tribune's World Section reported November 28, 2003...
In Afgahnistan, officials insist the country's fabled, 2,000 year old Bactrian gold artifacts are safe, but fears persist that someone might try to steal the ornaments, scabbards and crowns
For years, no one knew what had happened to the gold.
Some said it had been spirited away by the Russians or stolen by Ahmed Shah Massood, the onetime Norhtern Alliance commander. People whispered that the Taliban had melted it, sold it to Persian Gulf millionaires or presented it as a gift to Osama Bin Laden.
Then in late summer, President Hamid Karzai and several senior Cabinet officaials inspected the palace vault and announced that the Bactrian gold, a collection of 2,000 year old ornaments, jeweled scabbards, crowns and other objects excavated from ancient tombs in northern Afghanistan, was safe.
The Bactrian gfold, dug out of an Afghan desert by a team of Afghan and Russian excavators 25 years ago, may be the country,s greatest archeological treasure. But news of its rediscovery has been a mixed blessing for officials, who have seen thousands of the country's valuable artifacts looted, smuggled and sold by an international criminal network that deals in stolen art. Many are hesitant to discuss it.
We will increase the risk of theft if we talk about these things, one official said. We hope that real peace comes to Afgahanistan soon, and we hope we will be able to put the gold on exhibition for people to see someday. Then we well be able to tell all these sad stories.
When that time comes, the story of the Bactrian gold may be among the happier tales Afghans can tell about their rich cultural heritage. Its characters include devoted archeologists who helped unearth hundreds of beautifully wrought gold ornaments in an unassuming field outside the northern city of Shiberghan, and a heroic Afghan bank official, who endured beatings, imprisonment and the threat of death to protect the gold from teh Taliban.
The Story started about 330 B.C., when Alexander the Great conquered ancient Bactria, a swath of land in what is now northern Afghanistan. He left northern Afghanistan soon afterwards, but his influence remained as the culture he helped establish flourished for 500 years before nomadic Khushan tribesmen overran Bactria's walled town and subdued their inhabitants.
In Afgahnistan, officials insist the country's fabled, 2,000 year old Bactrian gold artifacts are safe, but fears persist that someone might try to steal the ornaments, scabbards and crowns
For years, no one knew what had happened to the gold.
Some said it had been spirited away by the Russians or stolen by Ahmed Shah Massood, the onetime Norhtern Alliance commander. People whispered that the Taliban had melted it, sold it to Persian Gulf millionaires or presented it as a gift to Osama Bin Laden.
Then in late summer, President Hamid Karzai and several senior Cabinet officaials inspected the palace vault and announced that the Bactrian gold, a collection of 2,000 year old ornaments, jeweled scabbards, crowns and other objects excavated from ancient tombs in northern Afghanistan, was safe.
The Bactrian gfold, dug out of an Afghan desert by a team of Afghan and Russian excavators 25 years ago, may be the country,s greatest archeological treasure. But news of its rediscovery has been a mixed blessing for officials, who have seen thousands of the country's valuable artifacts looted, smuggled and sold by an international criminal network that deals in stolen art. Many are hesitant to discuss it.
We will increase the risk of theft if we talk about these things, one official said. We hope that real peace comes to Afgahanistan soon, and we hope we will be able to put the gold on exhibition for people to see someday. Then we well be able to tell all these sad stories.
When that time comes, the story of the Bactrian gold may be among the happier tales Afghans can tell about their rich cultural heritage. Its characters include devoted archeologists who helped unearth hundreds of beautifully wrought gold ornaments in an unassuming field outside the northern city of Shiberghan, and a heroic Afghan bank official, who endured beatings, imprisonment and the threat of death to protect the gold from teh Taliban.
The Story started about 330 B.C., when Alexander the Great conquered ancient Bactria, a swath of land in what is now northern Afghanistan. He left northern Afghanistan soon afterwards, but his influence remained as the culture he helped establish flourished for 500 years before nomadic Khushan tribesmen overran Bactria's walled town and subdued their inhabitants.