Zahi Hawass: Egypt’s unique antiquities must return to their homeland
Archaeologist Dr. Zahi Hawass said, “When I was Minister of
Antiquities, I organized laws for antiquities, and I said that Egyptians must
get to know their antiquities and learn them so that they are not subordinate
to foreigners.”
Hawass added that when he was minister, “a theft of Egyptian
antiquities occurred from one of the female employees of the Louvre Museum. We
applied for the return of the antiquities, and the French mission operating in
Egypt stopped [its work] at the time. Then-President Sarkozy spoke to President
Mubarak, and President Mubarak blamed me. I explained to him that the Louvre in
Paris stole Egyptian antiquities, so he told me he would contact Sarkozy.”
“We Egyptians will not have a strong dialogue without having
real power, and we have the antiquities of Egypt that have the real power. When
we sent an archaeological exhibition to Egypt, we sent them the sarcophagus
that had not left Egypt before, and this sarcophagus was warmly received when
it arrived in France, with the same hospitality with which King Ramses was
received before,” Hawass continued.
“We say that the sarcophagus is
here in France because we would like to strengthen the Egyptian-French
relations through antiquities. When I look from here and see the Egyptian
obelisk, I feel sad, because the unique Egyptian antiquities must be returned
to Egypt again, and when I see the [Dendera] zodiac in the Louvre, I am very sad
because it is lying in the dark. Egyptian antiquities must once again return to
their home,” he added.
The famed Egyptologist’s remarks came during the symposium
of the Center for Middle East Studies (CEMO) in Paris, which was organized on
Friday, April 7, at the historic Hotel de Crillon overlooking the Pharaonic
obelisk, under the title “Egypt: The Dawn of Conscience”.
Egypt’s former Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, Dr. Zahi
Hawass, and journalist Abdelrahim Ali, director of CEMO in Paris, spoke at the
symposium, which was also attended by Egyptian Ambassador to France Alaa
Youssef, a group of editors-in-chief of French newspapers, a number of French
parliamentarians, as well as a number of senior politicians and Egyptologists.
The symposium was held on the sidelines of the Ramses and
the Gold of the Pharaohs Exhibition, which kicked off on Thursday, April 6, in
Paris and will continue for five months in the French capital.