http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/digging-antiquities-dream-get-rich-fast-upper-egypt
Digging for
antiquities, a dream to get rich fast in Upper
Egypt
Sun, 13/09/2015 -
16:53
Digging for antiquities is a common phenomenon in Upper
Egypt and it has its own rituals. It is a dream to get rich
fast, but many die in the process.
In Qena, it happened five times last year alone that the
soil collapsed over the diggers and buried them alive in the
holes they had dug.
Residents of Upper Egypt attribute the phenomenon to
poverty and unemployment, which drive the youth to try this
type of venture to make money.
Researcher Ayman al-Wakil says the people of Upper Egypt
believe in ancient Egyptian tales passed on from generation to
generation about treasures buried underground. He also says
they believe in jinns that guard those treasures, which can be
contacted through witchery to tell where the treasures are
buried.
Wakil says there are impostors who convince people they can
decipher ancient Egyptian codes. They say they know where the
treasures are hidden, in exchange for money.
Mahmoud al-Sayed from Upper Egypt says the phenomenon has
spread since the January 25 revolution, when there was a state
of lawlessness and people could infringe on state property.
“Usually, they do not find anything and they end up
fighting and perhaps even killing each other,” he says.
Fathy, a sheikh to whom people go to contact jinns, says
those tales are true. “I do not take money unless they find
the treasure,” he says. “I only take the expenses for the
incense and other material needed to recall the jinns.”
Lawyer Amr Hassan says digging for antiquities is forbidden
by law. “Some people sell their homes to pay the sheikhs,” he
says. “They often return empty handed.”
The looting of archaeological sites has spread
significantly throughout the oases of Egypt's Western Desert.
In the Om Al-Dabadeb area of the
Kharga Oasis there is an ancient Roman village located on
60,000 acres of land. In it there are remnants of a massive
fortress of mud-brick, tombs carved into the mountain and an
irrigation system considered the oldest in Egypt.
Salima Ikram, a Pakistani professor of Egyptology, says the
walls of the ancient Coptic church that was built to the
eastern side of the fortress were destroyed and buried under
the sand in 1998 when thieves dug for treasures, using a crane
and a forklift.
She says the main temple of the village was also destroyed
in the same way in 2004.
There is a project underway to save the Kharga Oasis
archaeological sites. It is being run under the auspices of
the American University in Cairo and in collaboration with
Cambridge University and includes an international team of
archaeologists from Egypt, Japan, the United kingdom and the
United States.
Kamal Fouad of the Karama Party says the previous
governments could not protect the archaeological sites from
theft. “There is a Mafia dealing in stolen artifacts,” he
says.
Sources at the Egyptian Antiquities Ministry say there is
not enough staff to guard all the sites and that the police do
not have enough four-wheel-drive vehicles to tour the sites
that are located deep in the desert.
Edited translation from Al-Masry Al-Youm
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