Taliban Guard Afghanistan National Museum After It Reopens


Taliban Guard Afghanistan National Museum After It Reopens

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – The National Museum of Afghanistan was reopened and the Taliban guard the building located in the capital Kabul.

Currently, about 50-100 people visit the museum each day, some of them Taliban members.

The museum, which hosts artefacts from the Paleolithic period to the 20th century, reopened just more than a week ago for the first time since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in mid-August amid the chaotic withdrawal of US and NATO troops.

Its director, Mohammad Fahim Rahimi, and his staff have so far been allowed to continue in their positions although they, like many of Afghanistan’s civil servants, have not received salaries since August.

Afghanistan has been facing a banking crisis in the wake of the United States freezing billions of dollars in Afghan assets and international financial institutions cutting funding for Afghan projects.

Only the security guards have changed, Rahimi said, with Taliban now replacing the police contingent who used to guard the building and providing female security guards to check visiting women.

Power cuts are frequent and the museum’s generator has broken down, leaving many of the exhibition rooms plunged into darkness.

On Friday, several Taliban, some with assault rifles dangling from their shoulder, were among visitors using the lights of their mobile phones to peer into display cases of ancient ceramics and 18th-century weapons, according to Al Jazeera.

“This is from our ancient history, so we came to see it,” said Taliban fighter Mansoor Zulfiqar, a 29-year-old originally from Khost province in southeastern Afghanistan who has now been appointed a security guard at the Interior Ministry.

“I’m very happy,” he said of his first visit to the museum, marveling at his country’s national heritage.

Zulfiqar said he had spent 12 years in Kabul’s notorious Pul-e-Charkhi prison, Afghanistan’s largest. While there, he said, someone had told him about the museum and he dreamed of the day when the Taliban would rule Afghanistan again and he would be able to visit the museum.

During its first stint in power during the 1990s, the Taliban ransacked the museum, smashing priceless statues. One of such artefact, the remnants of a limestone statue believed to be of a king dating from the second century, stands at the entrance to the museum building, now restored by experts from France and the museum’s own restoration department.

In 2001, the Taliban destroyed two giant sixth-century Buddha statues carved into a cliff-face in Bamiyan in central Afghanistan on orders from Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar, a move that met international outrage.

So, as the Taliban swept through Afghanistan earlier this year, taking province after province, there were grave concerns that a similar fate awaited the country’s cultural heritage, especially anything from pre-Islamic times. So far at least, this has not appeared to be the case.

Saifullah, a 40-year-old Taliban member from Wardak province and teacher in a religious school said he believed the 2001 destruction of artefacts in the museum had been carried out by lower-ranking Taliban members without orders from top-ranking officials.

Touring the museum for the first time, Saifullah, who goes by one name, said he would encourage his students, some of whom were now guards at the museum, to visit the National Museum of Afghanistan.

“Generations can learn from this, and what we had in the past,” he said. “We have a rich history.”

Perhaps Afghanistan’s new government now agrees with the inscription engraved on a plaque outside the museum building’s entrance: “A nation stays alive when its culture stays alive.”

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