Which heritage sites in Gaza have fallen victim to a ‘cultural genocide’?

Which heritage sites in Gaza have fallen victim to a ‘cultural genocide’?

An ancient harbour dating back to ⁤800 BC, a mosque that was home to rare manuscripts and one of the ⁤world’s oldest Christian monasteries are just ⁣a few of at least 195 heritage sites‌ that have ⁢been ⁣destroyed or⁤ damaged ⁢since Israel’s war on⁤ Gaza began on October 7, according to an NGO documenting war damage on cultural sites.

Wiping out the cultural heritage of a ​people ⁢is one of the many war ⁣crimes South Africa alleges against Israel in a lawsuit that was heard this past week at the International Court of Justice. It states: “Israel has⁤ damaged and destroyed numerous centres of Palestinian learning and culture”, including libraries, religious sites and places ⁤of ancient historical importance.

Wiping out the cultural heritage of a people is one of the many war‌ crimes South Africa‍ alleges against Israel in a lawsuit that was heard this past⁤ week at the International Court of Justice. It⁤ states: “Israel has damaged ​and destroyed numerous centres ​of Palestinian learning and culture”, ‍including libraries, ‍religious sites and places‍ of ancient historical ‍importance.

Gaza, one of the ⁤world’s longest inhabited areas, ⁢has been home to ⁤a pastiche of⁢ people since at ‌least the 15th century BC, according to historians.

Empires ⁢– ⁢including the ‌ancient Egyptians, Assyrians ‍and ⁤Romans – have come and gone, at times dominating ​the ​land of the Canaanites, the ancestors of the‌ Palestinians, leaving relics of their own ⁢cultural heritage behind. Greeks, ⁤Jews, Persians and Nabateans have also⁢ lived along this stretch of coast over the ​centuries.

Strategically located on⁢ the Mediterranean’s eastern shores, Gaza was always in a prime ‍position on the ‌trade routes from Eurasia to Africa. Its ports made it⁤ a​ regional hub for commerce and culture.‍ Since at least 1300 BC, the Via ‌Maris – a route running from Heliopolis in ancient Egypt, cutting​ across Gaza’s western coastline and then crossing into Syrian lands –⁤ was the main route that travellers would take on their ‌journeys ‍to Damascus.

“The crime⁣ of‌ targeting and destroying archaeological sites should spur the world and UNESCO into ‍action to⁤ preserve this great civilisational ‌and cultural heritage,” ⁣Gaza’s Ministry of⁢ Tourism and‌ Antiquities said after Gaza’s Great⁢ Omari Mosque was destroyed in an ⁤Israeli air strike on December 8.

Source ​from www.aljazeera.com

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