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Thursday April 18, 2024

Museum reopening boosts Iraqi national pride

BAGHDAD: Even as Iraq mourned the destruction of priceless artefacts by Jihadists in Mosul, the national museum in Baghdad brought joy and pride to visitors as it opened its doors for the first time in 12 years.The reopening to the public on Sunday was brought forward in response to a

By our correspondents
March 03, 2015
BAGHDAD: Even as Iraq mourned the destruction of priceless artefacts by Jihadists in Mosul, the national museum in Baghdad brought joy and pride to visitors as it opened its doors for the first time in 12 years.
The reopening to the public on Sunday was brought forward in response to a video released last week by the Islamic State group showing militants destroying statues in Mosul.
Many of the pieces on display in Baghdad were among the 15,000 looted when mobs ransacked the museum during the plundering spree that gripped the capital when US forces toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.
The blow was cataclysmic for an archaeological collection until then considered to be one of the world’s richest. Close to a fifth of the stolen artefacts have been recovered.
Around 100 visitors trickled into the national museum on Sunday morning — the start of the work week in Iraq — as the reopening took Baghdad by surprise.
Like many visitors, education ministry employee Umm Ahmed was a first-timer.
“I always felt I should see the museum,” said the middle-aged woman, wearing a black cardigan and a beige headscarf.
“These are masterpieces. I have never felt so proud,” she said, slowly walking along a spectacular relief of nine huge slabs depicting Assyrian king Sargon.
“I’ve been here for an hour and a half, and I plan to visit again. I can’t get enough of it,” she said, looking in awe at the majestic statues of kings who ruled what is now Iraq several millennia ago.
Hassan Ali and his two friends rushed to the museum because they wanted to see an artefact representing Ur-Nammu, a Sumerian king who ruled 4,000 years ago and is credited with giving the world its first legal code.
“He’s always mentioned in our books and courses, so we had to come and see him,” said the law student, who was nine years old the last time the museum was open to the public.