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Rediscovered Afghan gold treasure comes to New York

Tue Jun 16, 2009 3:23am IST
 
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By Claudia Parsons

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Afghanistan's National Museum is not yet ready to display a treasure trove of 2,000-year-old gold thought lost during three decades of war, but in the meantime Americans and tourists can see it in New York.

Known as the Bactrian gold, items such as an intricately carved gold belt, a delicate crown and numerous bracelets are part of a collection of more than 21,000 pieces of gold found in 1978 just before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

Rumored to have been taken to Moscow or stolen, the items were hidden in a vault and the secret was kept by a handful of employees of the National Museum of Kabul throughout the Taliban years and the U.S.-led invasion in 2001.

Only in 2003 was the vault at the presidential palace cracked open to reveal the extraordinary treasures that were originally buried in the tombs of six nomads in northern Afghanistan in the 1st century AD.

"Our national museum is still not in a condition that you would be able to display them there," Afghan Ambassador to the United States Said Jawad said at a preview of the exhibition "Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

He told Reuters proceeds of the traveling exhibition -- which has already been to Washington, San Francisco and Houston -- would help renovate the museum which was bombed decades ago and remained closed for some 25 years.

The museum has now reopened despite persistent violence, Jawad said, but the items on display in New York will go to Canada next and will not return to Kabul before 2011.

"New York has important symbolic significance for us," Jawad said at a news conference, recalling that both Afghanistan and New York were victims of the Taliban and al Qaeda. "The terrorists that destroyed your twin towers destroyed the twin Buddhas in Afghanistan," he said.  Continued...

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