Komentar goblok, karena tak mengetahui bahwa di negeri Islam seperti Mesir 
dipelihara Pyramid. Di Libiya, Syria, Jordania, Turki dipelihara patung-patung 
zaman Romawi. Lain kali kalau pergi cium batu hitam jalan-jalan sedikit lihat 
dunia, jangan terus pulang kampung dan otak tertutup dan hanya mengembik karena 
dengar ulama-ilam buta huruf.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: ndeboost 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, March 04, 2011 11:15 PM
  Subject: [proletar] Re: Bamiyan Buddha Statues: Ten years on


    
  Mumpung Amerika yang berkuasa di Afghan maka baikan bawa berhala-berhala
  di Afghan ke Roma, Timor Leste atau ke Rio de Janairo, nambah sembahan
  umat Crosstian Pauline

  --- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
  >
  >
  > http://english.pravda.ru/history/01-03-2011/117057-bamiyan_buddha-0/
  >
  > Bamiyan Buddha Statues: Ten years on
  > 01.03.2011
  > It is precisely ten years since the destruction of the statues of
  Buddha at Bamiyan in Afghanistan by the Taleban regime. With plans to
  rebuild the two statues having been shelved, their vestiges remain as a
  rallying point to preserve cultural heritage...and to remember the many
  other instances of destruction and pillage.
  > Irina Bokova, the Director-General of UNESCO (UN Educational,
  Scientific and Cultural Organization) considers that the vestiges of the
  two enormous statues of Buddha at Bamiyan can serve as a focal point for
  humankind to remember our common cultural heritage and to ensure that we
  protect it.
  >
  > "The two monumental statues had stood for one and a half millennia as
  proud testimonies to the greatness of our shared humanity. They were
  destroyed in the context of the conflict devastating Afghanistan and to
  undermine the power of culture as a cohesive force for the Afghan
  people," she stated at her Headquarters in Paris.
  >
  > In July 1999, issuing a decree to protect the statues, Taleban leader
  Mullah Mohammed Omar stated: "The government considers the Bamiyan
  statues as an example of a potential major source of income for
  Afghanistan from international visitors. The Taliban states that Bamiyan
  shall not be destroyed but protected."
  >
  > However, as the Taleban radicalised their position against imagery and
  in favour of more and more strict versions of their own interpretation
  of Sharia law, mixed up with the imposition of Pashtun lore, while
  targeting the non-Pashtun or less Islamist sections of Afghan society,
  calls were made by religious leaders to destroy the statues because the
  worship of images is against Islam. This was despite the fact that in
  his ruling two years before, Mullah Omar had stated that there was no
  longer a community of Buddhists in Afghanistan who worship the statues.
  >
  > It was also despite the fact that ambassadors from the 54 states of
  the Organization of the Islamic Conference had declared unilaterally in
  favour of protecting them.
  >
  > It took the Taleban weeks of determination to destroy them. After
  strafing the giant structures with anti-aircraft guns and artillery for
  several days, they were mined. When that failed to work, rockets were
  fired at them and then finally, they sent teams of sappers to insert
  explosives into the structures.
  >
  > Today only the niches where the statues once stood remain. UNESCO does
  not consider the option to rebuild them worthwhile (they were carved
  into the cliff face), yet there are still Buddhist monastic sanctuaries,
  as well as fortified Islamic buildings, at the site which is witness to
  13 centuries of Buddhist art showing various eastern and western
  cultural influences.
  >
  > However, this was not the only outrage against our collective cultural
  heritage. Irina Bokova explains, "Since then we have witnessed other
  instances where cultural heritage has fallen prey to conflict, political
  turmoil and misappropriation".
  >
  > The main issues at stake are the need to raise awareness and fight
  against attacks on cultural properties through looting, smuggling and
  illicit trade and more importantly, the promotion of tolerance and
  cultural rapprochement. This will be the central theme of the Forum at
  UNESCO's HQ in Paris on March 2, which will be followed by the Bamiyan
  Expert Working Group on March 3 and 4.
  >
  > At this last meeting the future of the niches remaining at Bamiyan and
  the way forward for this site will be discussed among representatives
  from Afghanistan, international experts, donors and other stakeholders.
  >
  >
  >
  > Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey
  >
  > Pravda.Ru
  >
  >
  > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
  >



  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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