Sudan's cultural treasures are being destroyed

While fighting between the military and the paramilitary forces of the RSF rages in Sudan, many of the country's important cultural assets are being destroyed, from invaluable libraries to mummies. By Philipp Jedicke

By Philipp Jedicke

The months of fighting in Sudan between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) troops have caused a humanitarian catastrophe. Since the conflict began in April 2023, more than 850 civilians have been killed and over 3,500 injured, according to Radhouane Nouicer, the UN expert on the situation of human rights in Sudan.

There is looting, murder and rape every day. Hundreds of thousands of people are fleeing the soldiers' vicious attacks.

"This is the destruction of a country in a way that is dehumanizing its people," Nouicer said in a recent statement. "What is going on is as bad as anything I have seen in conflict zones over the course of my long career. It is horrifying, tragic, brutal, and completely unnecessary."

According to the UN, both sides of the conflict are riding roughshod over international humanitarian law. Meanwhile, hospitals and doctors lack everything; chaos reigns at the borders and corpses lie in the streets. People risk being shot in an attempt to salvage the dead.

Radhouane Nouicer, the UN expert on the situation of human rights in Sudan (photo: Ashraf Shazly/AFP)
"This is the destruction of a country in a way that is dehumanizing its people," Nouicer said in a recent statement. "What is going on is as bad as anything I have seen in conflict zones over the course of my long career. It is horrifying, tragic, brutal, and completely unnecessary."

 

Destruction of cultural monuments and invaluable documents

The country's cultural treasures are also in great danger. Important sites have already been destroyed by the RSF. As the magazine The Continent reports: "The war in Sudan is destroying not just the country's future, but also the country's past."

Observers have compared the devastation of libraries, museums and places of worship to the Taliban's destruction of Afghanistan's cultural treasures.

According to the report in The Continent, important historical sites such as the Omdurman old market have been burned down by fighting in the Nile metropolis. The Mohamed Omer Bashir Center for Sudanese Studies, a library at Omdurman Ahlia University, was also destroyed there. Handwritten manuscripts and rare books simply no longer exist.

Hamid Bakheet, a poet and member of the Sudanese Writers' Union, explained the importance of the destroyed Mohamed Bashir Center: "it was one of the most important sources of written heritage because it contains important references in Sudanese history."

Two men walk towards the entrance to the Sudan National Museum in Khartoum (photo: Ashraf Shazly/AFP)
According to Philipp Jedicke, the National Museum in Khartoum was also stormed, and exhibits – including ancient mummies – were destroyed or damaged.

Mummified human remains among loot

The National Museum in Khartoum was also stormed, and exhibits – including ancient mummies – were destroyed or damaged.

According to the report in The Continent, there is a video of one of the RSF fighters presenting millennia-old mummies as victims of Sudan's former dictator Omar al-Bashir, who was ousted in 2019, and pledging revenge for their deaths.

Hamid Bakheet also described the destruction of important exhibits, such as rare animal species preserved at the Natural History Museum, as well as attacks on libraries and publishers, such as Dar Madarek, Dar Al-Kandaka and the "Booksellers' Complex" in Khalifa Square.

The country's cultural memory in grave danger

But why are the RSF destroying their own country's heritage? The fighters are often accused of ignorance, but Bakheet instead believes "that the destruction is being done deliberately, in an attempt to erase historical facts. They want to create a new era that starts with them."

"On top of this, there is hatred. Hatred for education and learners in general. They seem to want to reshape society into an ignorant society with no memory," he added.

According to Bakheet, protecting Sudan's remaining cultural treasures is extremely difficult, if not impossible, because the soldiers do not respect any conventions. "Perhaps intellectuals can start a campaign to collect references and rare historical books to recover what is written from this memory, but as for the contents of museums, there is no way to recover them, and herein lies the disaster."

Philipp Jedicke

© Deutsche Welle 2023