With ISIS execution, Syria loses key guide to Palmyra's ancient treasures
Islamic State militants beheaded one of Syria's most prominent antiquities scholars in the ancient city of Palmyra Tuesday.
In this undated photo released Aug. 18, by the Syrian official news agency SANA, one of Syria's most prominent antiquities scholars, Khaled al-Asaad, speaks in Syria.
SANA via AP
Istanbul, Turkey
Long before the Islamic State took over the ancient city of Palmyra, archaeologist Khaled al-Asaad had put the magical desert ruins on the map.
鈥淭his is a man who devoted his life to Palmyra and preserving its heritage,鈥 says University of Basel Professor Jean-Marie Le Tensorer, a Swiss archaeologist who first met Mr. Asaad in 1982. The two colleagues last spoke in May, right after IS militants seized Palmyra.
On Tuesday, those militants beheaded the 82-year-old expert, who introduced dignitaries and archaeologists from across the world to the monumental treasures that lie in the heart of Syria. They put his body on display聽behind a banner聽labeling him an 鈥渁postate鈥 and listing his聽offenses, which included 鈥渞epresenting Syria at infidel conferences,鈥 visiting Iran, and being in contact with high-ranking regime officials.
鈥淚 had hoped that Khaled Al-Asaad would go to Damascus or leave the country because he played a pivotal role as an archaeologist in Palmyra,鈥 says Mr. Le Tensorer. 鈥淲e are really shocked. I think he didn鈥檛 want to abandon his town and that he underestimated the level of barbarity of this people.鈥
Asaad had facilitated every foreign mission that joined in the early excavations of Palmyra starting in the 1960s, and oversaw the restoration of its ancient sites, including the Temple of Bel, the triumphal arches, the ramparts of the 13th 聽century citadel overlooking the ruins, and the desert Ummayad Palace, or Qasr al-Kheir, recall his colleagues.聽Asaad stood out as one of the few experts to master Palmyrene, a rare Aramaic dialect with a unique alphabet that was spoken in the early centuries of the common era.
When Islamic State arrived in May, Asaad, who was in charge of Palmyra's archaeological museum before passing the torch to his son, helped evacuate key pieces from the collection to an undisclosed location. The only artifacts left behind were a few sarcophagi that were too heavy to carry and the lion at the museum entrance.
They immediately detained the scholar and threatened to kill him, according to his nephew, also named Khaled al-Asaad. Under duress, Asaad expressed 鈥渞epentance鈥 and even went to IS stronghold Raqqa for one month before returning to Al-Tayba, a desert village near Palmyra.
鈥淗e loved Palmyra and the ruins. His family, his home was there,鈥 says the nephew. 鈥淭hen IS went after him again. I don鈥檛 know why.鈥澛
Islamic State, according to Le Tensorer, had hoped to find gold in Palmyra, and turned to the archaeologists of the town for guidance, without success. 鈥淚t was complete idiocy,鈥 he say. 鈥淭here has never been any gold in Palmyra; all you can find is ancient busts and things like that. No one could have met such a request.鈥
That account was confirmed by Asaad's nephew, who says Asaad was detained for 20 days before being executed. On arrival, the militants also briefly detained the scholar鈥檚 son, Walid al-Asaad, who had taken over his responsibilities in 2005. The younger Asaad 鈥 who tried to debunk the militants' gold fantasies 鈥 is now in hiding.
The rest of the family gathered in Homs聽on Wednesday to mourn together.聽
Remembering happier images
Photographs shared with 海角大神 show Mr. Asaad showing off the glorious ruins to famous figures ranging from French statesman Fran莽ois Mitterand to Japanese Empress Kojun.聽
Those are the images the family wants to remember.聽
聽鈥淚 am really sad,鈥 says Asaad's nephew. 鈥淗e never hurt anyone, he helped everyone, he was cultured, he wrote books about Palmyra. There was nothing but the regime in Syria, so of course he had to work with them.鈥
The International Council of Museums issued a statement vehemently condemning the murder of Asaad, who was a member.
鈥淗e certainly did not deserve such a tragic and repugnant end,鈥 says Denis Genequand, a senior lecturer in archaeology at Geneva University,聽 whose field work in Palmyra brought him into regular contact with Asaad, the last time during the summer of 2011. 鈥淗is execution yesterday was truly symbolic: Instead of carrying out a spectacular attack on the ruins of the ancient of Palmyra, the Islamic State took aim at the Syrian character who embodied and represented the city for more than 50 years, both in the world of researchers and the general public.鈥 聽