In this Tuesday, July 28, 2015 photo, a member of the library
restoration staff works on a damaged document at the Baghdad National Library
in Iraq. As the Islamic State militants now set out to destroy Iraq's history
and culture, including irreplaceable books and manuscripts kept in the
militant-held city of Mosul, a major preservation and digitization project is
underway in the capital to safeguard a millennia worth of history. (AP
Photo/Karim Kadim)
BAGHDAD (AP) — The dimly
lit, dust-caked stacks of the Baghdad National Library hide a treasure of the
ages: crinkled, yellowing papers holding the true stories of sultans and kings;
imperialists and socialists; occupation and liberation; war and peace.
These are the original
chronicles of Iraq's rich and tumultuous history — and now librarians and
academics in Baghdad are working feverishly to preserve what's left after
thousands of documents were lost or damaged at the height of the U.S.-led
invasion.
As Islamic State militants
set out to destroy Iraq's history and culture, including irreplaceable books
and manuscripts kept in the militant-held city of Mosul, a major preservation
and digitization project is underway in the capital to safeguard a millennium
worth of history.
In darkrooms in the
library's back offices, employees use specialized lighting to photograph some
of the most-precious manuscripts. Mazin Ibrahim Ismail, the head of the
microfilm department, said they're testing the process with documents from the
Interior Ministry under Iraq's last monarch, Faisal II, who ruled from 1939 to
1958.
"Once restoration for some of
the older documents from the Ottoman era, 200 to 250 years ago, is completed,
we will begin to photograph those onto microfilm," Ismail said. He said
the digital archives, which will not be made available immediately to the
public, is more to ensure their contents survive any future threat.
The restoration process is nothing
short of microsurgery, and the type of damage to each document is a story — and
a puzzle — on its own. Some manuscripts are torn from overuse and aging; others
are burned or stained from attack or sabotage. And then there are some that
were completely fossilized over time — the combined result of moisture and scorching
temperatures — looking instead like large rocks dug up from the earth.
"Those are the most difficult
books to restore," said Fatma Khudair, the senior employee in the
restoration department. "We apply steam using a specialized tool to try to
loosen and separate the pages.
"Sometimes, we are able to save
those books and then apply other restoration techniques, but with others, the
damage is irreversible," she added.
Technicians sterilize manuscripts
and documents for 48 hours, washing them of dust and other impurities that
accumulated over time. Then, they go page by page using Japanese tissue,
specialized paper for book conservation and restoration, to either fill in torn
edges or layer the more-delicate documents with a sheer coating to make them more
durable.
The Baghdad National Library,
established by the British in 1920 on donations and first overseen by a
Catholic priest, has weathered violent upheaval before. At the start of the
2003 U.S.-led occupation, when chaos gripped the capital, arsonists set fire to
the library, destroying 25 percent of its books and some 60 percent of its
archives, including priceless Ottoman records. Archives from 1977 to 2003
burned to ashes. Earlier archives from 1920 to 1977, including sensitive
Interior Ministry documents, had been stored in rice bags and survived the
blaze.
During the invasion of Iraq,
"we had an alternative site for the most important books and documents at
the Department of Tourism," said Jamal Abdel-Majeed Abdulkareem, acting
director of Baghdad libraries and archives. "Then books and the important
documents were exposed to water because the American tanks destroyed the water
pipes and water leaked onto these important cultural materials."
Around 400,000 pages of documents —
some dating back to the Ottoman period — and 4,000 rare books were damaged when
the pipes broke. They included the library's precious Hebrew archives, most of
which later were moved to Washington.
A team of experts from the Library
of Congress visited Baghdad to help assess the damage and recommended building
a new national library. More than a decade later, a state-of-the-art,
45,000-square-meter (484,380-square-foot) replacement by London-based AMBS
Architects is scheduled to open next year.
Until then, the Baghdad National Library
is looking to help those in conflict-ridden areas enjoy and appreciate Iraqi
culture. Library officials say that sharing Iraqi art and literature is key to
combatting terrorism. In recent months, the library donated some 2,500 books to
libraries in Iraq's Diyala province after Iraqi forces recaptured towns there
from Islamic State militants.
The militants "want history to
reflect their own views instead of the way it actually happened,"
Abdulkareem said. "So when an area is liberated, we send them books to
replenish whatever was stolen or destroyed, but also, so that Iraqis in this
area have access to these materials so they can always feel proud of their rich
history."
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