Sunday, July 22, 2012

SWAT BUDDHA destroyed by Taliban gets facelift :- 23.6.12 - The Pioneer


When the Taliban blew the  face off a towering,  1,500-year-old rock carving of  Buddha in northwest Pakistan  almost five years ago, it fell to  an intrepid Italian archaeologist  to come to the rescue.  Thanks to the efforts of Luca  Olivieri and his partners, the 6-  meter (nearly 20-foot)-tall image  near the town of Jahanabad is getting  a facelift, and many other  archaeological treasures in the  scenic Swat Valley are being  excavated and preserved.  Hard-line Muslims have a  history of targeting Buddhist,  Hindu and other religious sites  they consider heretical to Islam.  Six months before the Sept 11,  2001 attacks, the Taliban  shocked the world by dynamiting  a pair of 1,500-year-old  Buddhist statues in central  Afghanistan.  The Jahanabad Buddha,  etched high on a huge rock face  in the 6th or 7th century, is one  of the largest such carvings in  South Asia. It was attacked in  the fall of 2007 when the  Pakistani Taliban swarmed  across the scenic Swat Valley.  The army drove most of them  out two years later, but foreign  tourists who used to visit the  region still tend to stay away.  Olivieri himself had to  leave in 2008 after more than  two decades of tending to the  riches dating back to Alexander  the Great and the Buddhist,  Hindu and Muslim invaders  who followed. 


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