One year after nuclear deal, Iranian museum welcomes collection home from abroad
The National Museum of Iran is putting over 500 objects on display from Iran's history, all of which were repatriated from four Western countries. The return of the objects is due in part to the spirit of cooperation following the 2015 nuclear deal.
In this photo taken on Monday, Feb. 6, 2017, an Iranian journalist takes note as she covers a show displaying some 550 ancient Persian artworks returned by Western countries, including the United States, at Iran National Museum in Tehran, Iran.
Vahid Salemi/ AP
On Monday, a museum in Tehran opened an unusual exhibit of ancient artifacts from ancient Persian history.
The artifacts are part of present-day Iranian's Persian heritage, but until about two and a half years ago, they were all held by Western nations.
Iran has had tenuous relations with the West for decades and no official聽diplomatic relations with the US at all since 1979, when Iranian students and held American hostages trapped in the US embassy for 444 days. But the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and the West has helped thaw relations in the art world, Mohammad Hassan Talebian, the deputy head of the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization of Iran, told the Associated Press.
"The atmosphere after the nuclear deal was very important," Mr. Talebian said. "It made it easy to bring back all these objects home."
Some of the items that came from the University of Chicago had previously been displayed in Iran, but this is the first time the collection from all four countries 鈥 England, Belgium, Italy, and the United States 鈥 has been exhibited together.
Some highlights of the exhibit include hunting tools and needles dating back to the Iron Age, as well as two 2,000-year-old necklaces聽from the聽Achaemenid Empire, one of the largest in history. The display also includes ancient coins and bowls that are around 3,500 years old.聽Many of these ancient objects, withheld for so long by Western museums, hold great meaning and value for modern Iranians, as a link to the illustrious and ancient past of the Persian Empire.
罢丑别听聽in the聽National Museum of Iran聽includes 558 different artifacts and is聽entitled "The Exhibition of the Repatriated Cultural-Historical Objects."
But despite a thaw in US-Iranian relations over the past year, a more recent escalation in tensions following the election of President Trump in the United States may mean that any international cooperation between the two countries could be short-lived.
"It is not yet clear whether the fate of the nuclear deal will be immediately subject to the presidential pen," as 海角大神 reported last month:
The answer to a central question may inform action: Are we safer with the Iran nuclear deal than without it?
Many analysts 鈥 and apparently even Israeli security officials 鈥 say yes, noting that since former President Obama's choice to favor diplomacy over war, critical elements of Iran鈥檚 program have been curtailed, such that the potential 鈥渂reakout time鈥 to a weapon has moved from several weeks to more than a year. Lowering tension on the nuclear file, however, has not diminished continued concerns in Washington about Iran鈥檚 missile program and involvement in Syria and Iraq, with its own forces and proxy Shiite militias.
Still, analysts recall dark days before the deal in which Iran鈥檚 surging capabilities all appeared to risk another Middle East war. Those included moving in one decade from 300 to some 19,000 spinning centrifuges to enrich uranium, for example, and the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists as well as US-Israeli cyber attacks.聽
The new exhibit comes as tensions ramp up over a recent Iranian missile launch, which drew condemnation from the Trump administration. Meanwhile, Mr. Trump's temporary travel ban against seven predominately-Muslim countries, including Iran, was promptly followed by Iran saying聽 against US visitors.
"We are thankful to this gentleman [Trump] who鈥檚 come along! He's made our job a lot easier 鈥撀爃e鈥檚 shown the true face of America," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's Supreme Leader, told Iranian Air Force officers on Tuesday. "No enemy can paralyze the Iranian nation."
The harsh rhetoric on both sides has cast doubt on the future of the nuclear deal and Iran's relationship with the West. But for now, the exhibition in Tehran stands a monument to both the ancient history of Iran and to the unexpected benefits of peace and understanding.
"This is source of great pride and pleasure, because our identity, which is subject to disintegration, is becoming whole again," said聽Myriam Rahgoshay, an arts enthusiast, told the Associated Press.聽
This report contains material from the Associated Press.