![]()
|
Treasuring
the Past
Cultural Exchange | One of the worlds oldest-known musical instruments, a wooden lyre with a bulls head of gold and lapis lazuli, commands attention inside the Dietrich Gallery of the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. When a group of 23 visitors came here in March, it was not surprising that many wanted to be photographed beside the 4,500-year-old Sumerian treasure, which had been excavated during the 1920s by C. Leonard Woolley in what is now Iraq. What was a bit unusual was the small flock of news media recording each snap of the visitors cameras. The 23 were a delegation of Iraqi museum specialists spending two days at the Museum as part of a five-week exchange program sponsored by the U.S. State Departments Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA). The group was comprised of 15 women and eight men who work at museums in Babylon, Diala, Najaf, and Baghdad. During their visit they saw the Babylonian Tablet room, the ancient Near East collection, and a sneak preview of Treasures from the Royal Tombs of Ur, a nationally traveling exhibition that has returned briefly to the Museum. The visitors also met with exhibition-design and artifact-conservation experts. Though the war in Iraq has expanded the American publics awareness of Mesopotamian civilization, Dr. Richard Zettler, associate professor of anthropology and associate curator-in-charge of the Museums Near East Section, noted that Penns interest goes back to 1888, when some prominent Philadelphians, headed by Penn Provost William Pepper, sponsored an archaeological expedition at the holy site of Nippur. We look forward to a long history of exchanges in the future, including, I hope personally, exhibits from this museum in Baghdad, and exhibits from Iraqi museums coming here to Philadelphia.
Hayat Jav-Allah, curator of the Baquba Museum, called the exchange
program a courageous step and a smart step
by both Iraqis and Americans.
He decried the looting of Iraqi museums and was delighted to see antiquities
from Mesopotamia properly conserved and displayed here. Even when
they are away from their origin, if they are in secure hands, nobody
can take away from these antiquities their identity. ©
2004 The Pennsylvania Gazette
|
Penn-Princeton-Penn again: Joann Mitchell to be new chief of staff Seeking union cards, grad students strike Museum lays out welcome mat for Iraqi visitors Supporting the care and feeding of cities The swaggering pen of Norman Mailer Schoolhouse
rock(s) with activity Preventive mastectomies found to work Letter from Kurdistan II: A constitutions difficult birth SAS Dean Preston to step down; Museum names new director Seven Grammysand a Penn honorary degreefor Bono Russell Banks: Truth trumps fact in fiction Symptom: nail-biting; Cure: Placements for med students The place to mingleand eat Abners cheesesteaksin NYC Women are Ivy champs in basketball Mens Final Four team looks back after 25 years
|