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Swat
– a land of pristine beauty, a prime tourist destination,
a celebrated seat of learning, music and melody through the
ages and the centre of the glorious Gandhara civilisation –
is lost to war.
Known
as ‘Udyana’ (garden) in the Hindu scriptures, the
valley has turned into a hotbed of violence since Maulana Fazlullah,
a firebrand cleric-turned-Taliban commander, started propagating
extremist religious messages through an illegal FM radio station
in July 2006, and the Taliban took over.
Audio
shops, girls’ schools and public places were attacked,
killing and injuring hundreds of innocent people. Fazlullah’s
militants did not even spare Buddhist statues, monasteries and
rock carvings, as they viewed these sites as being the remnants
of an infidel civilisation whose obliteration would give them
a high place in paradise.
On
October 8, 2007, Fazlullah’s militants defaced a 23-foot
high, 7th century seated Buddha, carved in a rock in the lap
of a mountain in Jehandabad village, Swat.
Shamshir
Ali Khan, a local resident, said that a group of 40-50 militants
attacked ‘the meditating Buddha’ during the night
with explosives. “They brought a power generator with
them, drilled holes in its head, filled them with explosives
and then set them off, badly damaging the upper portion of the
carving.”
Locals
have confirmed that Mullah Abid Ghafoor of Shakhorai, a local
cleric and supporter of Maulana Fazlullah, spearheaded this
operation.
“It
was the rarest piece of Buddhist art in the region after the
Buddhist statues in Bamiyan, Afghanistan that were destroyed
by the Taliban in March 2001,” says Muhammad Aqleem, director
of Swat Museum in Saidu Sharif. Aqleem adds that Jehandabad
has turned into a hub of the Pakistani Taliban.
“If
concrete steps are not taken, I fear that we may also lose the
existing 22 Buddhist sites that beautify the rural skyline of
Swat,” he laments.
Historically, the region has played host to Alexander of Macedonia,
the Mauryans, the Indo-Greeks, the Indo-Syphians, the Kushans,
the Turk-Shahis and the Hindu-Shahis in different periods of
time. According to Dr Farooq Swati, chairman of the department
of archaeology, University of Peshawar, during the reign of
the Mauryan king, Ashoka, Buddhism thrived in the Swat valley
and spread to Central Asia and China. “The glorious period
of Buddhism extended from the 1st century BC to 4th century
AD. During this period, the Buddhist values of peace, love and
sacrifice brought about remarkable changes in people’s
socio-cultural and religious lives. Buddhism left its mark in
the form of stupas, monasteries, art, coins, pottery and other
artefacts, and shaped the times to come,” he says.
In 403 AD, a Chinese pilgrim, Fa-Hien, counted 6,000 monasteries
in the valley; two centuries later, Hsuan Tsang, another travelling
monk, estimated their number to be around 1,400. Even now, a
large number of Buddhist stupas, monasteries, settlements, caves,
rock carvings and inscriptions can be seen both in the plains
and the hilly areas of Swat.
The
first organised attack against Buddhist sites occurred in 1992,
when a group of ignorant locals defaced a Buddhist statue in
the Ghaligai village of Swat, in reaction to the destruction
of the Babri Mosque in India. The graceful 4-metre statue was
carved into a marble stone cliff and seated in meditation on
a high throne. Its lower part is still in good condition and
can be preserved for posterity.
However,
the Taliban are not the only ones guilty of wrecking such archaeological
treasures; the local people have also destroyed archaeological
sites to extract stones and bricks for use in the construction
of their houses. In some areas, treasure-hunters pillage these
sites in the hope of finding valuables and striking a fortune.
Usman
Ulasyar, chairman of the Swat Arts and Cultural Society, laments
that the concerned government departments have failed to create
awareness among the people about the historical significance
of these sites. “Five years back, the federal government,
in partnership with a foreign mission, allocated Rs.100 million
to develop parks and erect protective walls around the various
archaeological sites from Taxila to Swat. Though this money
was utilised in Taxila, nothing was done in Swat,” he
says.
Ulasyar
says that the local Taliban attacked heritage sites in Swat
on two grounds. “They (the Taliban) think that by destroying
Buddhist sites they are performing a religious duty; secondly,
they consider these sites as state property and, therefore,
avenge the government by attacking them. God forbid, you will
soon see religious seminaries in place of these sites.”
Adil
Zareef, secretary of Sarhad Conservation Network, sees this
problem in a broader historical perspective and says that our
educational system is based on the distortion of faiths and
religious values other than Islam.
“Basically,
our state policy negates our cultural heritage. If you think
that your history starts in 1947, then you are mistaken. We
have thousands of years of history, but our curriculum does
not educate our children about it,” he maintains, adding
that the Afghan jihad introduced Wahabism in the Pashtun society;
this breeds hatred, bigotry and violence against everything
that does not fit in with the narrow approach of the Wahabis.
“Likewise,
the current wave of militancy refuses to give any space to the
culture, values and heritage of other nations and faiths. They
[the militants] slit the throats of innocent people, destroy
girls’ schools and oppose modern education. Unfortunately,
we are losing both our past and the future, while the present
is just horrible,” Zareef adds.
In
the past, criminal elements have stolen antiquities from the
NWFP and smuggled them abroad. The customs officials and airport
security staff are often hand-in-glove with these smugglers.
The Afghan jihad brought this illegal trade to the NWFP and
encouraged some local groups to pillage their own cultural heritage
for monetary gains.
Feryal
Ali Gauhar, a PhD student undertaking research in Conservation
Management in a joint project of the National College of Arts
and Heidelberg University, says that there are those who are
espousing jihad, and there are those who have criminal pasts.
“It is quite possible that these elements, with or without
the collusion of the purely jihadi elements, may want to destroy
Buddhist and other cultural heritage in order to gain publicity
or to coerce the state and the international community into
accepting their demands. It is a scenario which can be imagined,
but not necessarily predicted,” she argues, adding that
these heritage sites provide a timeline of historical and cultural
evolution, as well as give us a sense of identity and a perspective
on the development of human societies, enriching our understanding
of the paths taken in the past and the paths we can construct
for our future.
“These
are invaluable sites, and not renewable resources. Once they
are destroyed, we cannot recover them,” she says.
It is high time
the concerned government departments, the international community,
UN agencies and the local population realise the severity of
the situation and devise a comprehensive strategy to protect
hundreds of rare archaeological treasures in Swat, which are
at grave risk from different militant groups and may be obliterated
if the rising tide of militancy is not stemmed.
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