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Paris exhibition unveils the rich 5,000-year history of Gaza

An exhibition now on until November at the Paris Institut du Monde Arab is showcasing the rich history of what is present-day Gaza, displaying objects that trace the artistic and commercial development of a place that has been a crossroads of cultures since Neolithic times.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

An exhibition tracing more than 5,000 years of cultural and archaeological history in Gaza has become a summer hit in Paris, as visitors flock to discover the heritage of this strip of land along the Mediterranean, whose multilayered past has been eclipsed by modern tragedy, reports The Guardian.

While Gaza faces a humanitarian catastrophe of starvation and war, the exhibition, Saved Treasures of Gaza, at Paris’s Institut du Monde Arabe, brings what curators called a sense of “urgency” to explain the rich history of a place that has been a crossroads of cultures since Neolithic times.

For thousands of years, Gaza’s location on the eastern Mediterranean made it a prosperous oasis. It was a trade hub, intellectual powerhouse and centre of learning, sitting at one of the world’s great geographical crossroads between trade routes from Asia and Africa. Many cultures and empires left their mark – including Philistines, Assyrians, Romans, Byzantines, Persians and Mamluks – as depicted by more than 100 intricate objects on display from statuettes, oil lamps and ceramics to inscriptions, imported marble and a vast Byzantine floor mosaic.

“We wanted to give Gaza its history back,” said Élodie Bouffard, the lead curator. “It was about restoring the humanity of Gaza and making its long history visible again, rather than reducing it to a discourse dominated by contemporary history. The focus on contemporary history risks depicting Gaza as a zone of tragedy, a bubble where only devastation is possible, when in fact there is a long human history in Gaza built upon thousands of years as a great centre of connection.”

Bouffard said: “Gaza was the most open space in the Mediterranean. It was a territory that was extremely rich, that produced a lot of food and whose connections to Africa and Asia made it a place of festival and celebration that was much talked about and written about, and a place that was continually inhabited.”

The pieces on show have been largely locked away in storage in Switzerland for 17 years: after an exhibition in 2007 at Geneva’s Museum of Art and History, the works could not be safely returned to Gaza because of the security and political situation.

“Their exile saved them in a sense,” said Bouffard, noting that otherwise they could have been lost in the current Israeli bombardment. But she said this also meant the pieces had mostly been sadly “hidden and locked away from view” and from public understanding.

One of the key pieces in the show is a small marble statue of a goddess, thought to be either Aphrodite or Hecate, dating from the Roman or Hellenic era, who would have once sat in a temple.

Read more of this report from The Guardian.