Gaza buries its ruins under buildings and farms

Neglect by PA and Hamas destroys heritage that spans thousands of years

Gaza
Tall Al-Sakan (Photo: Flickr)
Like other landmarks in the Gaza Strip, archaeological sites are vulnerable to Israeli aggression. They are also literally subject to total destruction through violations by official and unofficial Palestinian entities despite the laws that prohibit encroachments on these sites. This investigation by Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism (ARIJ) documents the systematic violations against the most famous archaeological sites in the Gaza Strip and the failures to protect them.اضافة اعلان

The archaeological site of Tall Al-Ajjul in the village of Al-Mughraqa in the center of the Gaza Strip has been transformed into a residential area and agricultural land. The features of the site have faded over 20 years of repeated encroachments by residents.

In its classification, the British School of Archeology that focuses on archeological research, says that this site dates back to the Middle Bronze Age between (2200–1500 BC) and the Late Bronze Age between (1500–1200 BC) after the excavations it conducted on Palestinian sites during the British Mandate period (1920–1945). The site had also seen limited usage in the eras that followed, including the Iron, Roman, and Byzantine ages, all the way up to the Islamic period.

The excavations were carried out under the supervision of the British scientist William Flinders Petrie in the early 1930s, who found artifacts, coins, ancient tools, buildings and palaces. This was documented in four volumes entitled “Old Gaza”, and relics from the site are on display even today at the British Museum in London.

Muin Sadiq, professor of History and Archeology at the University of Toronto explains that these discoveries are taught at universities in Canada, the US, and the UK.

During a tour of the site in May 2021, we could only find some pottery pieces as the archaeological landmarks and the various layers as documented in the 1930s as well the findings of an excavations team that had visited the site between 1999 and 2000 have faded. Houses and farmland have crept up on the site area.

The new state of Tall Al-Ajjul site astounded the Austrian-Swedish archaeologist Peter Fischer who specializes in Eastern Mediterranean and Near East archaeology, and had led the Palestinian-Swedish expedition in Tall Al-Ajjul in 2000.

When we showed Fischer the recent photos of the site, he said that “From what I have seen, building houses, planting olive trees, and razing the site destroyed the most important ancient Palestinian heritage. People think in the short term, and they ignore their responsibility towards previous generations that have built our world. It is our duty to preserve the ruins of that world.”

Fischer considers Tall Al-Ajjul a “multicultural site” important for world heritage. He explains, “The site shows interconnections between cultures extending across the Mediterranean region and even to further inland eastward. It was a gate linking Egypt and Syria and had extensive trade relations with Cyprus, but (recently) humanity has lost one of its most important heritage in the Levant.”

The recent deteriorating condition of Tall Al-Ajjul was preceded by a series of violations documented by Fischer himself during his last visit to the Gaza Strip in 2011 before Israel banned him from visiting the area again. He explains how houses and olive trees were encroaching everywhere on the excavation site that he had fenced off on his first visit. He says that vestiges of the Late Bronze Age have been destroyed. This made him wonder about the fate of the artifacts that must have been found by the aggressors when they built the houses or cultivated the land.

Today, the violating residents treat the land of the site as though it was their own property. One of them confronted the investigator while he was visiting the area claiming that “strangers are not allowed to take pictures of my agricultural plot of land.” The new resident expressed his fear of gangs that might steal antiquities from the site as he pointed his hand towards a hole under an area planted with olive trees which it seems (thieves) have been excavating at night.

We on passed this information to the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities run by Hamas in Gaza. Director of the Conservation and Restoration Department Ahmad Al-Bursh admitted that his ministry did not act to protect the site “because this process needs material and human capabilities”. He said, “The attack on Tall Al-Ajjul is an old issue, and the ministry has no knowledge of it. And that the site was abandoned after the days of the Palestinian Authority (PA).”

Professor Sadiq was the director-general of the antiquities department in the ministry when the PA controlled Gaza between 1994 and 2005. He admits that the site was subjected to violations during that period as it also did during the Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip between 1967 and 1993. However, he confirmed that his ministry took some measures in order to secure the site, this included placing a sign to warn against encroachments on the site since it is an endowment property, as well as providing security. These measures are currently not present.

Sadiq said that “razing parts of the site used to happen on Fridays as it is the day when the guards would be off duty.” He cited one example of unidentified parties using bulldozers to gain access to additional plots of farmland and a second of a person using his influence to move forward with construction of a house. “Only people with influence ... would dare do that.”

The status of Tall Al-Ajjul is not much different from the large percentage of 82 other archaeological sites spread across the Gaza Strip. These have been entered in the British surveys of sites, published in the Palestinian Al-Waqai newspaper in 1944 and were reviewed by Palestinian archaeologist Ayman Hassouna. The authorities were clearly unable to protect these from infringements, but they were also parties to the violations carried out in some of them.

During the PA’s control of the Gaza Strip between 1994 and 2007, four “intentional” violations of archaeological sites were recorded while 11 other violations were recorded during the period when Hamas controlled Gaza. According to the investigator, the Palestinian division since 2007 in Gaza was a precursor for the increase in archaeological sites violations.

Tall Al-Ajjul, Tall Al-Sakan, Al-Blakhiyah, and Tall Rafah, or Zo’rob, are the largest archaeological sites in the Gaza Strip, covering around 740 dunums (74 hectares). These sites were not protected, and three of them saw violations carried out by official entities and citizens alike. Tall Rafah site has escaped direct violations but it is a site at risk due to the effects of the natural elements since excavations or restoration operations have stopped.

The government provided the necessary security to only three archaeological sites in the Gaza Strip: These are Tall Umm Al-Amer or the Saint Hilarion Monastery in the center of the Gaza Strip; Tall Rafah or Zo’rob south of Rafah; and the site of the Byzantine Church in Jabalia north of the strip. These sites have been restored using funds offered by international organizations, while seven other sites lacked proper protection, and greenhouses now have surrounded them. Other parts were littered with garbage.

A team of youths called “Canaan Team”, that specializes in monitoring key ancient landmarks via an English and Arabic digital platform, claimed that landmarks at 31 archaeological sites in the Gaza Strip have disappeared as a result of urban expansion and continuous encroachments due to the absence of any classifications as archaeological sites in the Gaza land registry according to one Canaan members, Sundos Al-Nikhaleh.

The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities in Gaza holds the PA responsible for protecting the lands from encroachments by the population during the period it controlled the strip. It also holds the PA responsible for not registering archaeological sites or classifying them as untouchable. In fact, that same ministry (controlled by Hamas in Gaza) was also unable to protect these sites from encroachments as per Law No. 11 of 2018, governing cultural heritage in force in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. This law prohibits the violation of sites and the destruction of elements and components of tangible and intangible heritage sites.

The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities of the PA in the West Bank did not respond to ARIJ’s questions related to violations that happened while it controlled the Gaza Strip.

Decree Law No. 11 of 2018
Article 15:
No person is permitted to do any of the following acts:

1. Blurring, distorting, sabotaging, changing, destroying, or altering any of the elements or components of immovable heritage.
2. Removing any element or component of the heritage site, moving it from its place, writing, or engraving on it.
3. Dumping waste, residue, or dirt in the immovable heritage site and the area surrounding it.
4. Selling, buying, or trading any material extracted from an immovable heritage site.
5. Digging or excavating in immovable or other heritage sites in search of treasures or any other buried materials, even if they are the private property of owner.

Site name:
Port of Anthedon or Blakhiyah
Location:
West of Gaza City

History and significance:
It dates to 800 BC or earlier.
It used to be one of the most important commercial ports in that period which is a testimony to the mobility and trade activities of ancient Palestinians with the outside world.

The most important discoveries:
Buildings dating back to the Greek Hellenistic era and a Roman wall.
A city wall built in the era of the Assyrians.
Coins and artifacts that date back to different periods, starting from the Canaanites to all the way to the Ayyubids.

The most notable infringements are:
Razing the mosaic floor of a Byzantine church before 2007 (the date Hamas took over Gaza and authority was split between Ramallah and Gaza).
Constructing the Shatee Police Station on the site in 2013.
Constructing a stadium on the site in 2018.

Site name:
Tall Al-Sakan
Location:
Madinat Al-Zahraa, south of Gaza

History and significance:
This is one of the oldest archaeological sites discovered in the Gaza Strip. It represents evidence of human settlement that goes back to more than 5,000 years in the First Early Bronze Age (3000–3300 BC) and the Third Early Bronze Age (2650–2200 BC).

The most important discoveries:
Archaeological layers, remains of houses, structures, roofs and walls.
Pottery remains that combine Pharaonic and Canaanite antiquities, such as mixing bowls, plates, and jugs.
Seven facades of palaces dating back to the first ancient Egyptian dynasty.

The most notable infringements are:
Demolishing operations by the government to erect housing projects in 2017.
Expanding the buildings of the private University of Palestine by encroaching on the site.
The private Islamic University of Gaza swept away parts of the site as well.

Site name:
Tall Aslan
Location:

Beit Lahia, north of the Gaza Strip

History and significance:
It dates back to the Byzantine Age. Beit Lahia is referred to as “Beit Elijah”, which is the birthplace of the ecclesiastical historian Sozomenus who wrote about the history of the church in southern Palestine.

The most important discoveries:
Mosaic floors dating back to the Byzantine era were discovered in 2012.

Most notable infringements:
The majority of the site lies beneath residential houses inhabited by various families.
Residents constructed a wall around the site.

Site name:
Tall Al-Raqish
Location:
Deir al-Balah, in the central parts of the Gaza Strip

History and significance:
It dates back to the Iron Age (332–538 BC).
It was used as a port on the trade route that linked Gaza to Egypt.

The most important discoveries:
A cemetery dating back to the second Iron Age.
An 800m-long fence supported by security towers.
Pottery pieces dating back to the eighth century BC and to the Persian and Greek periods.

The most notable infringements are:
Residents constructed agricultural water tubs adjacent to the site.

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