The victory of the void, a defeat for the Taliban
The Bamiyan Buddhas will not be rebuilt, says Unesco. The
architect Andrea Bruno proposes a scheme that focuses reverently on their
absence
By Anna Somers Cocks. Conservation, Issue 236, June 2012
Published online: 31 May 2012
When Andrea Bruno, an architectural consultant to Unesco
for the past 40 years, went back to the Bamiyan Buddhas, blown up in March 2001
by the Taliban, he immediately scrapped all ideas he might have had about some
sort of replacement. “The void is the true sculpture,” he says. “It stands
disembodied witness to the will, thoughts and spiritual tensions of men long
gone. The immanent presence of the niche, even without its sculpture,
represents a victory for the monument and a defeat for those who tried to
obliterate its memory with dynamite.”
Two years after the destruction, the Japanese National
Research Institute for Cultural Properties, working through Unesco and the
Afghan authorities, began putting money into clearing up the site and
consolidating the surfaces of the niches. The aim at this point was to recreate
the Buddhas, an immensely ambitious project since the larger of the two was
taller than the Tower
of Pisa .
But there were doubts from the first whether this was the
right approach. There have been other proposals, from laser projections of
Buddhas onto the cliff face—unrealistic in a part of the world that barely has
electricity—to a plan from the University of Aachen to attach the remaining
fragments to the niche wall on a metal frame—unsatisfactory because hardly any
of the stone carving remains intact, the Buddhas having been hewn all in one
piece out of the living rock, which was therefore reduced to rubble by the
explosions.
What is more, Andrea Bruno, who knows the country
intimately, having led the conservation of the fort at Herat and the minaret of Jam over many years,
believes that such solutions do not take the sensibilities of the Afghans into
account. Rebuilding the Buddhas would inevitably be politically loaded, he
says, besides causing religious offence. “Here the Muslims strictly oppose
images; to recreate the Buddhas would be an insult even to non-Taliban Afghans.
We must show good manners,” he says. In fact, after ten years, the Unesco
meeting on Bamiyan held in Tokyo
in December 2011 announced finally that the Great Buddha would not be
recreated, and the smaller Buddha was unlikely to be.
Bruno has a proposal, however, which he describes as
ecumenical, and which, above all, aims to enhance the emotional and aesthetic
experience of viewing the empty niche. His idea is to create an underground
viewing space at the foot of the Great Buddha. He calls this a sanctuary,
alluding to the numerous sanctuaries within the cliff. For the two Buddhas were
part of a complex extending over a kilometre of cliff-face, honeycombed by
passages connecting hundreds of decorated caves once inhabited by Buddhist monks,
and now lived in by the poorest of the local villagers. Stairs leading up and
then down into the sanctuary would enhance the feeling of entering a concealed
sacred space, like a Bronze Age barrow. At the end of the chamber, there would
be a small replica of the Great Buddha, with light streaming in on it from a
circular opening above, through which the visitor’s gaze would be focused on
the grandeur of the void, in the same way as James Turrell frames the sky and
makes you see it with particular intensity.
The other part of the visit would take you into the tunnels
inside the cliff, up to a circular aperture above where the head of the Buddha
used to be. Pilgrims travelling along the Silk Route used to come here and look out
over the Bamiyan Valley , so Bruno has designed a small
viewing platform, which would be completely dismountable. He emphasises that
nothing in his design would be environmentally or visually intrusive, and could
all be built with local skills in a matter of months rather than years.
The local people are Hazaras, Shia Muslims who were
persecuted by the Taliban, and while enjoying relative peace at present, they
have seen their already low standard of living reduced further by the loss of
the Buddhas, which used to bring them travellers. They had no hand in their
destruction and would like to have something to offer tourists when travel
becomes possible again.
Bruno’s sanctuary would be the centrepiece of a much
broader programme, announced at the last Unesco meeting on the subject, in
December 2011 in Tokyo, which includes de-mining, archaeological excavations,
conservation of the cave sanctuaries and their wall decorations, instructing
the population on the importance of archaeological remains, and creating a
Museum for Peace and a museum for the few fragments of carved stone that
survived the dynamiting. Bruno sees all this as the very least the developed
world can do to make up for the cultural damage it has done to the Afghans,
from broadcasting rubbishy, consumerist TV channels into their homes to having
failed to give them alternatives to bad modernist architecture. He estimates
that his sanctuary project could be built for under €400,000 and would be a
considerable boost to local morale as well as homage to the majesty of the figures
that presided over the valley for one and a half millennia.
As for the decision not to recreate the Buddhas, it can be
seen as the wheel of history turning full circle. In the first century AD, it
was this part of the world, ancient Gandhara, that with its Hellenistic
sculptural tradition first gave Buddha his physical form. Until then, Buddha
had been represented by his absence—an empty throne or a footprint—and now in
Bamiyan he is present once again in an empty niche.
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