September 11, 2006

Destruction by restoration in Myanmar

The bricklayers are paid $1.35 a day to rebuild the ancient ruin: a small, 13th century temple reduced by time to little more than its foundation.

But they have no training in repairing aged monuments, and their work has nothing to do with actually restoring one of the world's most important Buddhist sites. Instead, using modern red bricks and mortar, they are building a new temple on top of the old.

They work from a single page of drawings supplied by the government. Three simple sketches provide the design for a generic brick structure and a fanciful archway. No one knows, or seems to care, what the original temple looked like. Nearby are two piles of 700-year-old bricks that were pulled from the ruin. The bricklayers use them to fill holes in the temple.

Known as Monument No. 751, the structure is one of hundreds of new temples that have popped up all over the ancient city of Bagan, which ranks with Cambodia's Angkor temple complex as one of Asia's most remarkable religious sites. Once the scene of an international rescue effort, Bagan is now in danger of becoming a temple theme park.

The late Myanmar historian Than Tun called the restoration "blitzkrieg archeology."

"They are carrying out reconstruction based on complete fantasy," said an American archeologist who asked not to be identified for fear of being banned from the country. "It completely obliterates any historical record of what was there."

Full story here; reprinted here and elsewhere. This is egregious, but awful "restorations" have been carried out in countries far less benighted than Myanmar.

Posted by David on September 11, 2006 9:01 PM

Comments

They belong in the pantheon right alongside the folks who dynamited the Buddha statues. I don't see the value in keeping every old building just because it is old, but some monuments are priceless--and to move people from their homes to build tourist hotels is a shame, whether it's Disneyland or Myanmarland.

Posted by: Sarah [TypeKey Profile Page] on September 12, 2006 4:56 PM
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