Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Free-for-all

A recently defaced devata I encountered on a visit to Banteay Prei last week
The Guardian Unlimited yesterday posted this story, which we've heard before, but its important that we hear it again. I visited a few temples in the Angkor Park last week and the missing head of a female devata figure at Banteay Prei was so clean that it must've been taken a matter of days or weeks before. Its still a major problem for those temples that aren't closely guarded night and day and anything remaining in the provinces is virtually an open invitation to steal.

Cambodia's Forgotten Temples Fall Prey To Looters - by Guardian Unlimited
The three freshly dug holes under the two arching palm trees measured a metre by about half a meter, and about half a meter deep. A few fragments of what appeared to be centuries-old clay pots were scattered around the excavation site, seemingly discarded as worthless in the hunt for more valuable treasure. "We find new holes every week," said Ndson Hun, a farmer living in the nearby village of Phoum Snay. "The demand [for artefacts] is as great as ever, so people keep digging." No one knows the extent of the riches at Phoum Snay, an unremarkable Cambodian village about 40 miles north-west of Angkor Wat, the complex of 100 9th to 15th-century Buddhist temples seen as among the world's architectural wonders. But, unlike at Angkor Wat, there are no heritage police here, no Unesco staff, and no local authorities to guard the site. As the latest holes testify, anyone wishing to pillage the remaining hidden riches will encounter few obstacles. Experts fear the decades-long looting for artefacts across Cambodia is now so rampant there will soon be little left outside the splendors of the Unesco world heritage site at Angkor. "Almost all sites of antiquity and temples far from towns are being destroyed," said Michel Trenet, the undersecretary of state at Cambodia's culture and fine arts ministry. "Naturally, the priority for us is to protect the Angkor sites and then think about the others. But we don't have enough guards and people are not motivated to protect their heritage. Cambodia is becoming a cultural desert."

Phoum Snay is a classic example. On its discovery, almost three years ago, the site was thought to have been a mass grave for victims of the Khmer Rouge, the communists who ruled from 1975-79 and under whose regime some 1.7 million people were executed or died from disease and starvation. Then, when iron-age artifacts, including weapons, jewelery, pots and trinkets, started appearing, the site was reassessed as the burial ground of an ancient army. The researchers moved in, and digging started. Thousands of items were found. Yet little was done to secure the area and antiques traders - people mainly from neighboring Thailand, say villagers, and seeking to sell Khmer treasures abroad - now have virtual free rein. Their success is shown by the regularity with which Khmer artifacts appear at auction around the world. At any one time, dozens of Khmer "treasures" are on offer on the eBay auction website. Poverty and greed are considered the two main motivations behind the looting. Monks living in a temple half a mile from Phoum Snay believe the villagers are involved in the illicit digging, despite protestations by Ndson Hun and his friends. "The villagers are doing it because they are so poor," said Moy Sau, clad in his traditional saffron-coloured robes. "They don't respect their heritage because they can't afford to turn down an offer of a few dollars for a night's work." Chea Vannath, president of the Centre for Social Development, says that the average annual income in Cambodia is about £155 a year - much lower in rural areas. "Protecting our cultural heritage is a luxury," she said. "People are fighting to survive so they don't know better." Moy Sau does not dare warn the authorities about the looting: "As a monk I cannot do anything because I rely on the villagers for my food."

Preservation
Even if he raised the alarm, that might not ensure the artifacts' preservation since government officials and members of the security forces are also involved in the trade, widespread reports suggest. A stone carver based a few miles away, in Phumi Rohal, who was too afraid to give his name, said some provincial government officials last month asked him to build a base for a "half Buddha" that one of their bosses had acquired. "I was suspicious even though they had lots of letters and said it would be kept in a temple," he said. "But I did it because I'm afraid of the authorities. Us little people can do nothing against them." With the country's legal system being so corrupt, the "dark forces", Mr Trenet says, are too powerful, even for him. A tour of Toul Ta Puon, known as the Russian market, in the capital, Phnom Penh, proves his point, with shops packed with tall cabinets full of artifacts. Bronze-age axe heads and rings sell for less than £15. One intricately carved 11th-century, long-necked water jar was £30. The shopkeepers appear motivated only by money and refuse to lower their prices, even for Mr Trenet, though most recognise him. "I would like to buy all [the artifacts] for the museum. But my salary is only [£155] a month so what can I do?" he says.

4 Comments:

Anonymous John said...

It hurts to see this.

July 30, 2008 12:57 AM  
Blogger Andy Brouwer said...

I agree John, I felt like i'd been kicked in the ribs when I spotted what I believe is a recent theft, within the confines of the Angkor Park, even though its a rarely-visited temple. I've been temple-hunting in Cambodia for many years and I've grown accustomed to these beautiful images having been removed from temples, both as part of the change in religion in the 14th century and in more recent years, but it hurts real bad when I see fresh thefts like these. I also saw them at Banteay Thom last week too where another devata had been removed in whole. And the damage that has been done to the temple of Preah Khan at Kompong Svay is perhaps the worst of all, though comparison is subjective when you read of the grave robberies at the pre-Angkor sites, not to mention the industrial-scale thefts by the French in the last couple of centuries.

July 30, 2008 8:43 AM  
OpenID Alison said...

Andy- Thanks for posting this I agree it is important to talk about!

There are actually a couple of errors in this article I wanted to correct. Firstly, the title in regards to "Cambodia's forgotten temples" implies that Phum Snay is an Angkorian temple site. In fact it is an extremely important Iron Age site. Iron Age sites date to about 1000 years before Khmers began building stone temples. Many people unfamiliar with Cambodia only assume that the archaeology here dates back to the Angkorian period and that archaeological sites only consist of temples. In fact people have lived here for thousands of years and the pre-Angkorian sites are just as interesting (if not more in my opinion) than the Angkorian period sites in terms of how people lived and the Angkor Empire emerged. The destruction at Iron Age sites is 100x more devastating than when looters go after reliefs at a temple site, as ENTIRE sites and all the context and information on them is lost when looters dig for burials. Cambodia's entire prehistory is being systematically destroyed by this kind of looting.

Because these Iron Age sites don't have sexy photogenic ruins they are not a priority for the government to protect (as is implied in the article). The author is also incorrect in stating that the site was discovered 3 years ago. It was first "discovered" and excavated in 2001, then in 2003 by a team from the Royal University of Fine Arts. More recently there is a continuing excavation at Phum Snay by a Japanese archaeological team and several reports have been published on it. Perhaps it was poor reporting that the author did not take time to interview archaeologists who had worked at this site and their efforts to salvage and protect it. Dougald O'Reilly's (who has worked at this site and director of Heritage Watch) absence is conspicuous. For readers that are as upset about this as I am, I suggest donating to Heritage Watch, which is one of the few organizations trying to control and prevent looting at sites across Cambodia.
http://www.heritagewatch.org/

July 30, 2008 2:37 PM  
Blogger Andy Brouwer said...

Yes I was surprised Dougald wasn't asked for a quote (or maybe he was). He's usually keen to tell it as it is, which is as you say, very disturbing for the Iron Age sites in Cambodia. Nothing is sacred nowadays and the desire to make money, however small, far outweighs the historical and cultural importance of preservation. For the villagers, if they don't take it, someone else will, so asking them to abstain is a Herculian battle to win. But that's not to say we shouldn't try our darndest. And Dougald and his crew are doing just that.

July 30, 2008 3:10 PM  

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