Azad Jammu and Kashmir is a storehouse of antiquities. A team of archaeologists and researchers recently conducted the documentation of 100 key sites in Muzzaffarabad division and to the surprise of nobody and the despondency of many, what they found matched the national picture. A seminar held at the Quaid-e-Azam University Taxila Institute of Asian Civilisation (TIAC) was told that heritage sites from the Mughal, Dogra and early Sikh periods were all threatened. Some of the buildings surveyed had become havens for stray animals and drug users, others had been ‘converted’ to other uses. Any conservation work or preservation that is done tends to be piecemeal, underfunded and heavily reliant on foreign donors for funding. There does not appear to be any national strategy to address the issue of how best to be custodians of our cultural heritage, and individual provinces have very different priorities when it comes to funding allocation and cultural preservation. Pakistan may not be a rich country and care of antiquities arguably is a lower priority than feeding the neediest, but we hold these precious stones in trust on behalf of the rest of the world, a trust we currently fail to deserve.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 5th, 2014.
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