Archaeologists in Gaza Rushed to Rescue Thousands of Ancient Artifacts From an Impending Airstrike

This article was first published by the Smithsonian Magazine

One day after Israel issued an evacuation order for Gaza City on September 9, a notification popped up on Fadel al-Otol’s phone.

It was a warning: The Israeli military planned to strike the al-Kawthar building, a 13-story residential tower that housed a warehouse of ancient artifacts on its ground floor. Otol, a leading Gazan archaeologist now living in Switzerland, would need to help coordinate an immediate evacuation from more than 1,000 miles away.

“It was a catastrophe for me,” Otol tells L’Orient Today’s Zeina Kovacs. “These objects are the fruit of our work in Gaza from the past 30 years.”

The warning sparked a frantic effort to safely evacuate thousands of mosaics, ceramics, coins and other artifacts belonging to the French Biblical and Archaeological School of Jerusalem (known by the French acronym EBAF), a renowned institution that has supervised excavations in Gaza for decades. These items had been recovered from five archaeological sites, including one of the oldest Christian monasteries in the Middle East.

By the time the airstrike leveled the building on September 14, workers had managed to move about 70 percent of the collection. The remaining 30 percent—mostly ceramics and gemstone artifacts—was lost.