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Moenjodaro: researcher commits himself to saving site from obscurity

2017-05-17
MOENJODARO: The centre of a powerful ancient civilisation, Moenjodaro was one of the world`s earliest cities a Bronze Age metropolis boasting flush toilets and a water and waste system to rival many in modern Pakistan.

Some 5,000 years on archaeologists believe the ruins could unlock the secrets of the Indus Valley people, who flourished around 3,000 BC in what is now India and Pakistan before mysteriously disappearing.

But they warn, if nothing is done to protect the ruins already neglected and worn by time it will fade to dust and obscurity, never taking its rightful place in history.

`Everybody knows Egypt, nobody knows Moenjodaro, this has to be changed,` says Dr Michael Jansen, a German researcher working at the sunbaked site on the banks of the Indus River in Sindh.

Dr Jansen is at the forefront of a new effort to promote the site internationally while finding ways to protect what is lef t.

In summer temperatures can soar above 46 degrees Celsius.

`There is enormous thermostress,` he explained, adding that salt from the underground water table was also damaging the ruins.But it`s more than just the weather and time. The country`s bloody fight against militancy has also raised the spectre of destruction by an Islamist group, much like the militant Islamic State group destroyed the ruins in Syria`s Palmyra.

Most horrifying, however, is the wanton disregard for Moenjodaro or `mound of the dead` by ordinary citizens.

In 2014, police stood atop the main stupa as hundreds of people swarmed the site to, ironically, commemorate Pakistan`s cultural heritage complete with scaffolding, dancing, fireworks, heavy spotlights and lasers.

Sindh`s cultural minister Sardar Ali Shah vowed never to let such a thing happen again.

`It`s like you are jumping on the bed of a 5,000-year-old ailing patient,` he said.

Yet today curious visitors still roam the remains with impunity, many leaving rubbish in the once pristine-streets and wells.

Foreigners are afraid Dr Jansen and his Friends of Moenjodaro society aim to promote the site internationally, with plans to recruit Pakistanis around the world for conferences, seminars and debates.

Dr Kaleem Lashari, chief con-sultant to the Pakistani government over Moenjodaro, said they will also digitally archive the Indus script which has never been deciphered -in hopes that making it accessible will increase the site`s profile.

At the site itself, he said, technical reviews are being held to examine the water logging issue and other ways to shore up the ruins, while exploring new, modern technology that allows researchers to ascertain what lies beneath the surface in the portions of the city not yet excavated.

But, Dr Lashari said, perhaps the biggest challenge remains Pakistan`s international image, tarnished by extremism, corruption, poverty, and insecurity.

`Foreigners are afraid to visit Pakistan and the site because of the chronic issue of law and order,` he warned.

All roads lead to equality? The issues he cites underscore unsettling differences between modern-day Pakistan and the civilisation found among the ruins.

At their peak during the Bronze Age, the Indus Valley people are believed to have numbered up to five million, with Moenjodaro their largest and most advanced settlement.Clay and metallic seals, coins, standardised weighing stones, gold and bronze ornaments, toys and whistles the bric-a-brac of ancient lives have revealed volumes about thriving Indus trade and commerce.The layout of the city itself suggests an egalitarian people more concerned with cleanliness than hierarchy, said Dr Jonathan Mark Kenoyer of the University of Wisconsin.

`In Mesopotamia, the streetswent from the city to the palace ... whereas in (Indus) cities all the streets were organised to allow access to the whole city, he said.

Moenjodaro had a complex water and waste managementsystem which observers have wryly noted was better than in many parts of Pakistan today.

Only a small portion of the site has been excavated properly, but the most important building appears not to have been a palace or a place of worship, but a massive public bath.

Houses had tiled bathrooms and their own cylindrical brick wells, sometimes raised to the second floor to allow for a flush system.

None of this, however, has yet explained why such a powerful, advanced and flourishing civilisation disappeared so abruptly around 1900 BC.

Currently, there is no bid to excavate further among the plans being laid by Dr Lashari and Dr Jansen. `It is actually preserved when it is buried, explained Harvard University`s Dr Richard Meadow.

Despite their access to new technologies, that puts researchers in a quandary, especially as they try to understand what happened to the Indus people. As Dr Jansen said, the `best way to learn information is to excavate`.

But mysteries take time to solve: for now, the researchers say, they will settle for ensuring that Moenjodaro endures for a few centuries more.-AFP