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UNESCO puts ancient Christian monastery in Gaza Strip on “danger list” – ZENIT


UNESCO puts ancient Christian monastery in Gaza Strip on “danger list” – ZENIT

(ZENIT News / Arab News, 08.11.2024).- An ancient Christian monastery in Gaza was recognized as a World Heritage Site in Danger during a UNESCO session in New Delhi last Friday, August 2. Arab news reports.

Founded around 340 AD by Saint Hilarion, the monastery is part of Tell Umm Amer, an archaeological site in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the Deir al-Balah province of the Gaza Strip.

After the Permanent Delegation of Palestine originally submitted the nomination for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2012, it was processed under expedited procedure during the ongoing annual session of the World Heritage Committee.

Ambassador Mounir Anastas, Palestine’s permanent delegate to the United Nations cultural agency, welcomed the inscription, saying it gave hope to the people of Gaza in the face of ongoing Israeli attacks that have killed at least 40,000 people and destroyed much of the Palestinian enclave’s infrastructure since October.

“It is a message of hope for our people in the Gaza Strip who are fleeing the bombs and have no roof over their heads, no water and no food.”

Yet they are determined to protect their heritage because this heritage is part of the memory and history of our people,” Anastas told Arab News on the sidelines of the UNESCO meeting.

The recommendation was submitted by Belgium and supported by 18 other members of the current World Heritage Committee, who resorted to the emergency procedure provided for in the World Heritage Convention and agreed to inscribe the St. Hilarion Monastery Complex on both the World Heritage List and the List of World Heritage in Danger.

According to the provisions of the convention, the 195 states parties – including Israel – are prohibited from causing direct or indirect damage to the site. They have committed themselves to helping to preserve the site.

“Once the site is on the List of World Heritage in Danger, it means that all States Parties to the Convention are responsible for protecting and promoting the site,” said Mounir.

“And this is also another strong message from the international community to our people in the Gaza Strip: the international community has not forgotten you.”

Saint Hilarion was a native of the Gaza region and is considered the father of Palestinian monasticism. His monastery was once an important stop at the crossroads between Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Mesopotamia and is associated with the phenomenon of desert monastic centers during the Byzantine period. It is also a testimony to Christianity in Gaza.

The complex is one of the oldest monasteries in the Middle East and consists of two churches, a tomb, a baptism hall, a public cemetery, an audience hall and dining rooms.

At least 207 of a total of 320 archaeological sites and buildings of cultural and historical significance have been reduced to rubble or severely damaged by Israel’s deadly military strikes and indiscriminate bombing of the Gaza Strip over the past ten months.

These include the Orthodox Church of Saint Porphyrios – the third oldest church in the world –, the 12th-century Great Omari Mosque and the nearby medieval old town market of Al-Qissariya, Gaza’s ancient seaport dating to 800 BC and a Philistine cemetery dating to the Late Bronze Age (1550-1200 BC).

The destruction of many archaeological sites was detailed in South Africa’s indictment of Israel for genocide before the International Court of Justice. The indictment argues that the mass killing and destruction of cultural heritage in Gaza demonstrates the intent of the Israeli leadership to destroy the Palestinian people and their cultural identity.

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