[MSN] Central Asia: Silk Road Revival Grows As More Sites Protected.
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Mon Jun 26 18:04:07 CEST 2006
Monday, June 26, 2006
Central Asia: Silk Road Revival Grows As More Sites Protected
By Richard Solash
Photos with this report:
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/06/C189684A-2F37-473D-A192-829CBD5
A697A.html
The Minaret of Jam, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in western Afghanistan
(UNESCO)
If we could somehow blow away the centuries-deep sand that today covers the
ancient tracks of the Silk Road, we would see amazing things. We would see
caravans of up to 6,000 camels moving slowly, day by day, across the vast
distances separating China and Europe. Each kilometers-long caravan carries
as much as a large merchant sailing ship of its time and along the routes,
great cities of trade and learning flourish. Today, this ancient world is
gone but its historical importance is increasingly recognized. And now, new
international efforts are under way to protect the legacy of the Silk Road,
from Turkmenistan to Kyrgyzstan.
PRAGUE, June 26, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- In Turkmenistan, the archeological
treasures of Merv, a city by some estimates believed to be the world's most
populous in the mid-12th century, are safe.
So, too, is the Islamic architecture of Bukhara and Samarkand in Uzbekistan.
These are some of the riches of the Silk Road that are already protected by
their inclusion in UNESCO's World Heritage List -- a grouping of hundreds of
sites that are officially recognized for their cultural importance.
Saving History From Extinction
But for each Silk Road site on the list, there are others that are
conspicuously absent.
"There are also a number of sites which were not yet ready to go onto the
World Heritage List because of their [poor] state of conservation, says
UNESCO World Heritage Center representative Francis Childe. "Cities, for
example, like Otrar, an extraordinary archeological site in south
Kazakhstan; Krasnaya Rechka in Kyrgyzstan in the Chui Valley. These sites
were very badly neglected in Soviet times."
Burana Tower, all that remains of Balasagyn, an important trade city on the
Silk Road in Kyrgyzstan (UNESCO)Childe and his colleagues have been working
for nearly a decade on these and other sites to save them from decay and
bring them up to the physical condition necessary for nomination to the
World Heritage List.
The efforts are supported by funding from Norway, Italy, Switzerland, and
especially Japan, which has contributed several million dollars to
conservation projects in Central Asia. Additionally, Turkey has sponsored a
number of projects, contributing funds directly to the region's governments.
In the future, Childe hopes to also receive monetary support from the
wealthy Persian Gulf states, which he would like to channel to places like
Afghanistan, where the need is particularly acute.
"A part of what we have been doing is to conserve these sites which were
excavated in late Soviet times, were then opened to the elements, [and were]
in danger of disappearing completely and totally from the face of the earth
within the next 10 or 15 years [due to decay]," Childe says.
International Expertise
Often, the actual work of physically restoring damaged buildings is as
international as the sources of funding. Conservation experts from Europe
and the United States are brought in to work with local specialists and
craftsmen, teaching them the skills necessary to preserve and restore the
sites.
As a result, cities such as Otrar may soon be receiving the World Heritage
List status that they deserve.
Childe says that UNESCO representatives and regional officials will meet in
Samarkand from October 9 to 14 to prepare the official nomination of many
new sites.
"The member states themselves -- the Tajiks, the Kazakhs, the Kyrgyz, and so
on -- will come to an agreement on which sites they wish to identify from
their country, see what needs to be done in terms of their conservation and
their nomination, in order that we might present a kind of a global Silk
Road nomination for all of the Silk Road sites or at least for a series of
Silk Road sites from Central Asia, perhaps some time as early as 2008,"
Childe says.
Rediscovering Historical Identities
But aside from their architectural and archeological value, the Silk Road
sites also represent a chance for the people of Central Asia to rediscover
their identities.
The remains of a Nestorian church in Suyab, Kyrgyzstan (UNESCO)This, Childe
says, proves that preservation of the Silk Road does not only mean
respecting the past, but also means looking toward the future of Central
Asia.
"In Central Asia in Soviet times, the ethic groupings, if you will, of most
of the Central Asian states basically lost their historical identity," he
notes. "They were as much as told, "you weren't developed until the USSR was
formed, you were nomads, you had no archeological sites, you had no
history," and so on -- which simply wasn't true.
"So in part, the restoration and conservation of these great archeological
sites is a way to give back the Kazakhs their own history, to give back the
Kyrgyz their own history, to give back the Tajiks their own history and
their own cultural identity," Childe says.
Economic Benefits
The Silk Road countries could also derive substantial economic benefits from
the rediscovery of their cultural legacies. Inclusion on the World Heritage
List is likely to translate into a sizeable boost in tourism.
According to Childe, the city of Otrar had approximately 8,000 or 9,000
visitors per year before his team began work on the site. Today, he
estimates that figure to have risen to 100,000 visitors per year -- a number
which should only increase if Otrar gains list status.
And the Silk Road, which for so long provided a stage for intercultural
exchange, may be able to re-adopt this function as well.
"These [sites] can eventually become motors for local economic development,
but also [can act as] an exchange of experience between peoples," Childe
says.
"The Central Asian ex-Soviet Republics remained completely isolated and cut
off for more than a hundred years, and now that they're opening up again,
they're as interested to see people coming from America and from Japan and
from Australia as the people in those countries are to go and actually visit
them," he adds. "So there's an economic potential there, but there's also a
real potential for genuine human understanding and interchange."
Childe's UNESCO team is presently working on some 12 sites across Central
Asia and in China, with a budget of some $7 million.
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