Destruction of the Statues
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A Museum for Kabul
Afghanistan's National Museum after the War
Text, and web design by Erik Gauger, photographs courtesy Mustamandy Family
 
 
 

After the destruction of the statues, UNESCO, a UN department which arbitrates disputes revolving around cultural property, slackened its grip on its policy of condemning cultural artifacts crossing borders. The hope was that eventually the pieces would be returned to Afghanistan. Against their will, the pieces were driven into private markets, perhaps hidden forever.

Zurich

I phoned Mr. Bernard Weber from the New Seven Wonders Foundation in Zurich. Mr. Weber - museum curator, adventurer, aviator and filmmaker, has recently made news around the world by planning the reconstruction of the giant Bamiyan buddhas, in correlation with a worldwide vote on a new set of seven world wonders. I asked him, "Why would somebody from Switzerland have an interest in Afghanistan?"

"I grew up with culture," he said, "because my family owns a museum...I am a filmmaker. I was brought up making documentaries for the museum, working in the Museum. Basically, I wanted to find a subject for an Imax film. There are not many subjects that fit the big screen, so I developed this idea based on my passion for world heritage and the great sites of the world. There has never been a declaration of the new seven wonders of the world. The old symbols were symbols of unity for the antique world; they were the first travel guide, established by the Greeks as a kind of travel map. Hopefully, we can establish seven symbols of unity for the new world."

I asked him how he intended to reconstruct the Buddhist Statues.

Archeology

 

Archeology

 

"I wanted to meet Mr. Paul Bucherer (of the Afghanistan Museum and Institute in Zurich), because he was the first one to declare that art can be in exile," Weber said, "just like man, a subject which I found interesting. We met on May First, and the project of the Buddha Reconstruction began. It turns out that Mr. Bucherer's friend, Professor Kostka, a professor at the Technical University of Graz in Austria had a specialty as a 3D photogrametric mapmaker in the Himalayas; mapping three dimensional mountains. But in 1970 he was asked to map the Buddhist statues since he was in the area."

Mr. Kostka's measurements are the only ones that exist of the Buddha statues, allowing the New 7 Wonders Society the unique advantage of being able to mastermind the reconstruction.The technology will allow Weber and Bucherer to create a one-tenth size reproduction of the statues. This phase will allow them to explain the process to potentialinvestors, and begin to request the appropriate funding from the world community for the project of reconstructing the real Buddha's from local sandstones.

 

 
 

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©2012 Erik Gauger. All text, photographs, illustrations and web design created by the author