AL HILLAH, Iraq — Soldiers of the 172nd Infantry Brigade are enabling documentarians, historians and preservationists as they work to ensure ancient Iraqi history is preserved and documented in Babil province. The 172nd Inf. Bde. provides these experts transportation and security as part of their ongoing mission in support of the Babil Provincial Reconstruction Team.
The Babil PRT hosted the World Monuments Fund to conduct site surveys of Babylon, an ancient city near the modern city of Al Hillah in Babil province. These surveys were conducted to determine the possibility of making the Babylon ruins a sustainable historic and tourism site and to develop responsible tourism associated with the ruins.
The World Monuments Fund is a New York-based private, nonprofit organization dedicated to the preservation of historic architecture and cultural heritage sites worldwide through fieldwork, education and training. The WMF is launching a project with Iraq to preserve the ancient city of Babylon, where King Nebuchadnezzar II, whose life spanned 630-562 B.C., built his hanging gardens, one of the Seven Wonders of the World.
"We are involving the local populace in the solutions to create a sustainable situation," said Jeff Allen, the project team leader. "What you don't want to do is develop something that outsiders are just going to profit from. You want something where the local populace benefits from it."
"Future tourism will be one of the tools for economic development in Iraq, and we fear that Babylon could be eaten up by unmanaged development like the paving of roads," World Monuments President Bonnie Burnham stated at the beginning of the project. "The city has never been mapped, and there have been very dramatic changes to it."
Soldiers of 2nd Battalion, 28th Inf. Regiment, 172nd Inf. Bde. make it possible for civilians working with the PRT and U.S. State Department to go to sites throughout Babil province and do their work safely.
Gwendolen Cates, an independent filmmaker, is making a documentary titled "Mourning in the Garden of Eden" illustrating the historical significance of the history of Babylon.
"I am making a documentary of the cultural heritage of Iraq and connecting the past to the present and how that relates to us," said Cates, a native of New York City. Cates started this project in 2003, when she served as an embedded photojournalist with U.S. Army Military Intelligence in Iraq.
"Iraq has a lot of diversity and many Americans do not know about Babylon and where it is," added Cates. "Bringing tourism back to Iraq is one of the main purposes of this project."
"Iraqi heritage belongs to all humanity," Samir Sumaida'ie, Iraq's ambassador to the U.S., said in a statement. "In the immense task of caring for its world heritage, Iraq welcomes help from and collaborations with the international preservation community."
Date Taken: | 06.30.2009 |
Date Posted: | 06.30.2009 03:32 |
Story ID: | 35774 |
Location: | AL HILLAH, IQ |
Web Views: | 259 |
Downloads: | 198 |
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