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The
Economist looks at Turkey’s cultural ambitions as it "launches a new
culture war" and "gets tough with foreign museums" holding stuff looted
from Turkey ('
Of Marbles and Men', May 19th 2012):
The mildly Islamist government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, led by the
Justice and Development (AK) party, likes to think of itself as the heir
of the Ottoman sultans. The Turkish authorities have recently launched a
wave of cultural expansionism, building new museums, repairing Ottoman
remains, licensing fresh archaeological excavations and spending more on
the arts. A grand museum in the capital, Ankara, is due to open in time
for the centenary of the Turkish republic in 2023. “It will be the
biggest museum in Turkey, one of the largest in Europe; an encyclopedic
museum like the Metropolitan or the British Museum (BM),” boasts an aide
to Ertugrul Gunay, the culture and tourism minister. “It’s his baby,
his most precious project.”
Turkey’s cultural plans at home are coupled with an unprecedentedly
bold campaign to bring back treasures that it believes were stolen,
which now sit in Western museums. These plans enjoy political support
across the spectrum and the backing of all Turkey’s museum directors.
The campaign targets many more objects and museums than the government
has so far let on. “We are not waging a battle,” says Mr Gunay. “But
this is definitely a struggle in the field of culture. And we are
determined to boost our efforts in a more determined and more persistent
way.”
It would be interesting to see from the collectors currently
decrying Turkey's efforts to repatriate stolen artefacts a reasoned
argument why Turkey should not build a Universal Museum. Why should they
be restricted to just a few nations ? And maybe Turkey deserves one:
Growing economic power and stalled talks over EU membership make many
Turks feel that it is time to turn their backs on the West. Amid the
turmoil of the Arab spring Turkey believes it can become the leader of
the region.
The Economist's journalist is clearly on the side of the rich
western museums and collectors, referring to the fact that stuff was
ripped off and ripped up in the nineteenth century saved them:
removed treasures they believed might be at risk from war and
insurrection, and gave them to the new European museums. Foreign
scholars saved a considerable number of Turkish artefacts from being
commercially looted or destroyed by invading armies. This is rarely
mentioned in Turkey’s discussions about its archaeological past.
So looting stuff for yourself to "save' the objects from being looted
by somebody else? That's the old metal detectorists' argument too. The
economist grudgingly points out that "
though Turkey passed a law in 1884 (updated in 1906) stating that all
antiquities were the property of the state and could not be taken out of
the country, this was only loosely enforced" and looters helped
themselves to what they fancied. They present it as going back on some
form of gentlemen's agreement that the Turkish government today "
argues that any object
without the correct permissions or with gaps in its provenance has been
stolen and so belongs to Turkey".
The article gives its readers some details of some recent demands:
The Weary Hercules (returned to Turkey from BMFA in September 2011)
The Hattusas sphinx sent back after May 2011 from the Pergamon Museum,
Metropolitan Museum of Art (September 2011),
The Samsat Stela in the British Museum,
Turkey has many other museums in its sights. A list of artworks being
sought abroad indicates the culture ministry has made similar demands of
the Louvre, the Pergamon, London’s Victoria and Albert Museum
(V&A), the Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon, the Davids Samling Museum in
Denmark, the Dumbarton Oaks Museum in Washington, DC, the Cleveland
Museum of Art and the Getty. It has also claimed stolen antiquities that
have been seized by police in Frankfurt, Florence, Bulgaria,
Switzerland and Scotland.
It seems Ertugrul Gunay could soon be taking the place in the
Cultural Property Repatriation drive that was (is?) occupied by Egypt's
Zahi Hawass. His ministry is beefing up its anti-smuggling and
intelligence
bureau, and will soon add criminal and legal units to its task force.
Gunay explained: “I wholeheartedly believe that each and every
antiquity in any part of the world should eventually go back to its
homeland. Even if these objects are made of stone, just as people have
souls, so do animals, plants and monuments. Taking a monument away
destabilises the world and is disrespectful to history”. It seems his
stance has a lot of support in today's Turkey.
The Economist sees a problem for the position of those holding artefacts from Turkey:
Turkey is convinced of the justice of its quest. Moreover the culture
ministry lumps together objects that were smuggled out of the country
illegally with those that were removed—perhaps legally to a place of
greater safety, but not provably so—in an era when ownership was judged
in a looser way. For Turkey, all of these objects were stolen. It is
determined to get them back. [...] counting any object
acquired without a distinct contract as stolen should alarm museums
everywhere.
The fact that Turkey seems to be treating cases in the same manner
whether they are pre-1970 or post-1970 (which of course is its sovereign
right to do - especially in the light of the 1884 law) means that it
lays its own museums open to similar claims. During the period of the
Ottoman Empire, a number of important antiquities were taken (the
Economist suggests they were all "forcibly removed") to central museums
in what is now Turkey, and thus taken from their homelands which are
today separate countries.
Photo:
Ertugrul Gunay, the Turkish culture and tourism minister.