UNESCO is the United Nations agency overseeing cultural heritage sites across the world. In 2019, Russia was elected to the committee for a term. At the last World Heritage Committee’s summit in 2021, the Russian Federation was selected to host the 2022 conference, in Kazan.
The Spasskaya Tower is the main entrance to Kazan's best attraction: its Kremlin. It's located on the land side, just behind the Musa Jalil monument. The whitewashed main tower, with a clock in the middle, provides entrance to the whole Kremlin via the arched pedestrian access, and inside is a fine looking Kul Sharif Mosque. A perfect choice!
But following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the UNESCO faced pressure from European groups to relocate the meeting scheduled for Kazan which was to run from 19-30th June. So could the location of the 2022 meeting be changed, asked members of the Committee composed of 21 member states elected from the 194 countries.
In early March, as the Russian-Ukrainian war worsened, UNESCO was already anxious about threats to cultural heritage sites across Ukraine. UNESCO has already reported the sites that have been damaged: 29 religious sites, 16 historic buildings, 4 museums and 4 monuments
So UNESCO questioned Ukrainian museum officials re safeguarding cultural property at risk. To track the threats to Ukraine’s cultural heritage, UNESCO worked with Artists at Risk, a global non-profit that aided artists in conflict zones. However what was ironic was that Ukraine called for the next World Heritage Committee meeting to be moved to Lviv in Western Ukraine. I would not risk a war zone!
Lviv is marked in green
UNESCO asked Ukrainian powers to mark cultural sites and monuments with the distinctive Blue Shield emblem of the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property. This Convention, which Russia and Ukraine both signed, was to protect cultural properties from deliberate or accidental damages during armed conflict!
Before the current war Ukraine already had 7 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, including Lviv’s Historic City Centre, Kyiv’s Saint-Sophia Cathedral and Kyiv’s Pechersk Lavra Monastery. These were seen as a priority, as was Chernihiv’s historic centre which was waiting for world heritage status before the war started.
The UN agency confirmed that 53 historical sites, religious buildings and museums were damaged during the war. The agency specified the crimes: destroying a local history museum in Kyiv, bombing a Mariupol theatre and damaging a Holocaust memorial in Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine. The mayor of Chernihiv accused Russian forces of intensifying their bombardment of his city. For my family the most important damaged site was Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial Centre in Kyiv, where thousands of Ukrainian Jews were exterminated by the Nazis & their Ukrainian collaborators.
Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin, Yasnohorodka near Kyiv
destroyed by heavy-calibre machine gun. BBC
destroyed by heavy-calibre machine gun. BBC
Some cultural buildings will be rebuilt after the war, while others were totally destroyed. UNESCO experts will continue to verify each report and will add other sites to this list if bombing continues. Later UNESCO will meet Ukrainian cultural professionals, World Heritage Site managers and museum directors, to determine what aid is needed.
Mariupol Theatre, before and after being bombed
9News
9News
A UNESCO rep told Art Newspaper that there were no plans in place to relocate the session from Kazan. So 30+ cultural heritage academics & professionals sent a letter to UNESCO, urging them to change its deplorable plan for the World Heritage Committee. Read the UNESCO page to see that UNESCO has indeed opted to postpone the event indefinitely.
Art critic Waldemar Januszczak recently visited Ukraine to discover how the national art was being saved from Russian bombs. It started at a London meeting of 10 of Poland’s most important museum directors. Januszczak asked the Polish directors if they knew what was happening to Ukraine’s art and to Lviv’s museums. Weeks earlier, the director of the National Museum in Poznan had driven a truck to Ukraine, to help the Ukrainians by hiding their art.
When Januszczak was driven to Lviv, giant billboards constantly loomed up, emblazoned with stirring mottos: “Be ready to join the army and save Ukraine”. Lviv is a beautiful cobbled, gothic city, the architecture having a unique appeal. He visited the Lviv National Art Gallery, the largest museum in Ukraine, because many of the nation’s important art treasures had been sent there for safekeeping.
When Januszczak was driven to Lviv, giant billboards constantly loomed up, emblazoned with stirring mottos: “Be ready to join the army and save Ukraine”. Lviv is a beautiful cobbled, gothic city, the architecture having a unique appeal. He visited the Lviv National Art Gallery, the largest museum in Ukraine, because many of the nation’s important art treasures had been sent there for safekeeping.
robbreport
The Director was annoyed that Westerners forgot that the war with the Russians started in 2014 in Crimea - the present war was just another episode. So Ukraine had plenty of time to prepare plans for ensuring the safety of its national art. Yes, many of the art treasures from Kyiv, Kharkiv and Dnipro came to Lviv. But was there more art still waiting?
The stained glass of Lviv’s cathedral was wrapped in shiny protective sheets, as were the statues outside the church. Lviv’s magnificent opera house became a poster site for heroic imagery because, in times of war, art matters more.
The director drove Januszczak out of Lviv to a a disused monastery where the museum kept some of its art. He arrived at a crumbling building surrounded by a high wall and they marched him through many corridors jam-packed with thousands of icons and baroque church sculptures, thrown away by Soviet soldiers in Ukraine in 1939!
The Director was annoyed that Westerners forgot that the war with the Russians started in 2014 in Crimea - the present war was just another episode. So Ukraine had plenty of time to prepare plans for ensuring the safety of its national art. Yes, many of the art treasures from Kyiv, Kharkiv and Dnipro came to Lviv. But was there more art still waiting?
The stained glass of Lviv’s cathedral was wrapped in shiny protective sheets, as were the statues outside the church. Lviv’s magnificent opera house became a poster site for heroic imagery because, in times of war, art matters more.
The director drove Januszczak out of Lviv to a a disused monastery where the museum kept some of its art. He arrived at a crumbling building surrounded by a high wall and they marched him through many corridors jam-packed with thousands of icons and baroque church sculptures, thrown away by Soviet soldiers in Ukraine in 1939!
20 comments:
Boa noite. Infelizmente acho que o patrimônio da Ucrânia sofreu grandes perdas e terríveis. Desejo um bom final de semana.
I’m glad to see the art has been put somewhere safe. Too many Middle Eastern wars where ancient art was stolen, or destroyed. And those Buddhas(though, of course, you can’t move those! )
How powerful has the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property been in protecting cultural heritage of any country? I suspect warring countries don't bother too much protecting their enemies' churches, galleries, theatres and other treasures.
Luiz
I do too. Yes buildings can be rebuilt after bombs and tanks, but the touchable link that a nation has with its history will have to be recreated from the ground up. UNESCO will pay renovation funds, thank goodness. And I hope other nations participate in the rebuilding.
Sue
I am also hopeful that many of the portable art objects could be moved to safe sites, but many heavy statues, as you say, cannot be moved. Look for example at Lviv's protected statues:
https://www.timesofisrael.com/under-fire-ukraines-lviv-scrambles-to-protect-its-historic-statues/
Almost all the architecture is virtually unprotectable, of course :(
Student
there are enormous problems with the 1954 Hague Convention. Firstly not all nations signed the Convention. Cold War anxieties stopped U.S Pres Dwight Eisenhower from ratifying it in the U.S Senate (until decades later). Secondly even the nations who did sign ..still had to prepare in time of peace for the safeguarding of their own cultural properties IN ADVANCE of armed conflicts. Thirdly there were no consequences for nations that breached the Convention (until decades later).
One example will do. Islamic State destroyed some 30 important historical religious buildings but did anything happen to them?
Death and human tolls of war are horrible, but they cut short life by decades perhaps. The destruction of historic buildings, art and cultural objects lasts perhaps centuries into the future, if not eternity.
Andrew
absolutely true. Even if some money is going to be available, the national spirit is so depressed that the rebuilding will be slow.
My maternal family came from Mariupol, and from what I can see on tv, they have lost their past as well. When my late mother last visited, the old family houses were intact, ditto their schools, all their synagogues, shops, library, theatre and music hall were beautiful links with their heritage.
I visited the Lviv National Art Museum. I had the place almost to myself one afternoon. It was always my intention to revisit the city with two people I met on the first visit but then Covid came along and we never made the trip. I am hoping that Rynok Square is untouched by bombs.
Rachel
I would love to have visited Lviv National Art Gallery, before Covid and before the current war.. but not now. And I imagine it will be some long time before any of us get there in the future.
Rynok/Market Square was a medieval centre to the city, and thank goodness it still looks intact. Yet the historic city centre of Lviv was only recognised as a UNESCO world heritage site some 20-25 years ago. I think the architecture all around the square, taken from the styles of every country in every century, is amazing.
Hi Hels - I've been amazed at what the Ukrainians are able to do ... and am pleased they've been saving as much of their art as they can, and then looking after the buildings, statues and stained glass ... I fear, though.
I'd have loved to have visited Ukraine and to see it ... but thank you for this post - sad for you - with thoughts - Hilary
Boa tarde. Bom domingo com muita saúde e paz. Aproveito para desejar um ótimo mês de maio.
Luiz
thank you. I wish the same thing for the civilians in Ukraine.
Hilary
I hope they are able to save their cultural heritage as well. But it seems that there is no end in sight.
One day you will be able to visit that part of the world, but it is going to look destroyed for a long time, I fear. And I wonder if the Ukrainians who ran into Poland etc to save their families will ever return.
Russian troops have looted more 2,000 artworks from museums in the devastated Ukrainian port city Mariupol. The Mariupol City Council detailed how Russian forces systematically plundered three local museums, including the Kuindzhi Art Museum, since the invasion began in February. The collection has reportedly been transported to Donetsk, an industrial city in eastern Ukraine’s separatist region backed by Russia. The occupiers ‘liberated’ Mariupol from its historical and cultural heritage.
Tessa
good grief :( The only thing I can think of it that the 2,000+ artworks taken from Mariupol museums used to be Russian treasures until 1991 when Ukraine became an independent nation. Thank goodness the collection was taken to Donetsk and not destroyed. That way the Mariupol museums will be able to assert their legal rights in a future court case.
I am pleased to hear that some of the artworks have been moved to relative safety. How terribly sad that these beautiful buildings are being destroyed. Indeed Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial is important to us, though I believe that the most iconic memorials in the park were unscathed.
Handmade,
Babi Yar is the most bizarre damage I have heard in this Russian-Ukrainian War. The only nations that tried to get tens of thousands of Jews out of Poland, Germany, Hungary etc were China (Harbin, Shanghai etc) and Russia (Birobidzhan, Vladivostok, Siberia etc). They gave them accommodation, jobs and food, when other nations blocked the ports and sank the refugees' ships. So why on earth would Russians try to damage Holocaust Memorials now? Was it an accident?
My heart goes out to the Ukrainian people. The people, culture and art are being systematically destroyed. It is good that some of the art can be saved.
CherryPie
Me too. War is bad enough when soldiers are killed and maimed, but killing civilians is an obscene war crime :(
Re culture being destroyed, the pro-Ukrainian mayor of Mariupol broadcast last week that original masterpieces had been handed over to the occupants by the Director of Mariupol’s Museum of Local History. The Mariupol City Council said that 2,000+ unique pieces had been looted from the city’s museums by Ruscists. (See the Art Newspaper)
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