
Irbil’s Kurds Live On A Hill Of Undiscovered Treasures
Date: Friday, December 16th, 2005 (CST ) Topic: Ancient History
The plains of Iraq are dotted with giant mounds that archeologists call "tals," sites that have grown higher and higher over the millennia, as people built new homes upon the ruins of older ones.
Much of what we now know of ancient Mesopotamian civilization comes from excavations of such sites.
But Iraq's archeological sites -- some of the richest in the world -- attract few researchers today. The problem is security, illustrated by the kidnapping on 25 November of the German archeologist Susanne Osthoff. She is still being held captive and will be killed, insurgents say, unless Germany breaks off relations with Baghdad.
Aziz says he
has nowhere else to go. When he moved to the citadel, he came with
eight members of his family; today, his extended family has grown to
more than 40, more than his small land holdings in his native village
can support.
But officials in
Kurdish-administered northern Iraq say their region is safe enough for
excavation work. And one fascinating place to probe is the
36-meter-high tal in the center of Irbil, a citadel that historians and
archeologists say has been continuously inhabited for 6,000 years.
Below the homes that now stand on the hill are the remains of ancient
civilizations still waiting to be explored.
Kanan Mufti, general
director for antiquities in the western Kurdish region, says that
probes sunk deep into the hill have shown evidence of layers of
successive civilizations. Not enough work has been done to be able to
identify who exactly those inhabitants were, but among the peoples who
have lived in the Irbil region are Akkadians, Sumerians, Medes,
Persians, Greeks, Parthians, and Abbasids. All have been attracted by
Irbil's location, on a fertile plain at the junction of two rivers and
in the foothills of the Zagros Mountains.
Mufti says the successive
names of Irbil give some idea of this history. Sumerian scripts refer
to it as Urbylon. The Assyrians called it Arbaillo and considered it
one of their most important cities. The Medes knew it Hadeap. A
historian accompanying Alexander the Great named it Arbella. And the
Kurds still call it Hawler, probably meaning "the place where the sun
is worshipped" since the name is thought to derive from the ancient
Kurdish word "helio" (sun).
A Home Unfit To Live In
As Irbil, now the capital
of the Kurdish autonomous region, became the densely populated city it
is now, the citadel itself became less popular, with its inhabitants
abandoning their homes for more spacious apartments in the city below.
But in the 1980s it again
became a citadel, as Kurds sought refuge from the wars waged by Saddam
Hussein against the Kurds. “More than 4,000 or 5,000 people live in the
citadel right now," says Lolan Mustefa, curator of a textile museum
that he established in one of the many large homes in the citadel.
Almost all of them fled there while Hussein’s troops were razing whole
tracts of Kurdish land in campaigns aimed at clearing border areas
during the war with Iran and at ending a Kurdish insurgency.
One of those who found
shelter here is Abdullah Ahmad Aziz. He fled to Irbil in 1987 along
with many members of his tribe after his village in the mountains was
gassed. He settled in the citadel “because the houses were empty and
cheaper than in other places. And most of our relatives were there.
There were houses for one Iraqi dinar or two Iraqi dinars [about $6] a
month."
Aziz now works as a police
officer. Many of the other men who live in the citadel work as laborers
or run small businesses. After so many years, the citadel has become
their home. But the houses “aren't worth living in,” Aziz says. “Water
drips from the ceiling, I’ve put up plastic sheeting to stop the
dripping. And in the rooms above [us], I have also put plastic sheeting
to stop mice and scorpions and snakes from coming down…On three
occasions we have killed snakes coming down through the ceiling."
Aziz says he has nowhere
else to go. When he moved to the citadel, he came with eight members of
his family; today, his extended family has grown to more than 40, more
than his small land holdings in his native village can support.
These displaced Kurds hope the government will one day give them enough compensation to afford better housing in Irbil.
Making A Refuge A Home
International interest in the citadel as an archeological treasure could help make that a possibility.
The UN's cultural agency,
UNESCO, is financing preliminary studies into the possibility of
renovating parts of the citadel. Many in Irbil hope the result will be
a well-restored old town and some careful excavations of the site.
That is also the hope of
Mustefa, who studied anthropology in the United States and founded the
Textile Museum to help preserve the rich carpet-weaving heritage of the
nomadic tribes that still live in the mountains. Each day up to 140
visitors, most of them Kurds, come to look at the brilliantly colored
collection of carpets that hang on the walls of the museum.
"According to the director
of antiquities and the government of Kurdistan, UNESCO is coming to
renovate the houses and to make [the citadel] a tourist attraction,
with museums and cafes and restaurants and so on,” he says, as he
stands on a balcony and looks out over the houses, mosque, traditional
public bathhouse, and crumbling mud-brick hovels that make up the small
town inside the citadel's walls. “But they want to have some people
still living here."
That would maintain the citadel’s millenia-long tradition of continuous habitiation.
Irbil’s citadel is just one
of numerous potential archeological sites throughout the Kurdish
region. A study carried out decades ago by Baghdad catalogued more than
3,000 sites. Mufti, the director of antiquities, says fewer than 25
have been excavated, because Hussein generally forbade archeological
digs in the Kurdish region in an effort to deny Kurds evidence of a
cultural heritage distinct from that of other Iraqis.
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