Saturday 14 January 2012

BBC Whodunnit - A BBC article designed to suppress the truth about just who burned down the Napoleon Bonaparte institute

The following article appeared on the BBC website as 'analysis'. To anyone with half a grasp on reality it is undisputed that those responsible for burning down the Napoleon Institute in Cairo were islamists filled with hatred and a destructive wish for all that western civilisation stands for, even extending towards priceless and irreplacable maps and books. 

Despite this, the BBC without saying it in so many words identifies the culprits as coming from Tahrir square, thereby allowing the reader to identify in his mind the democracy protesters, to picture in their minds the young forward looking and western oriented facebook users, i.e. exactly the sort of people who didn't do it. 



14 January 2012 Last updated at 11:47

Saving Egypt's precious fire-bombed books
By Sarah Hashash
Cairo


Restorers laid burnt and damaged books out to dry in the Institute's garden
Thousands of historical documents could be lost following a fire at the Institute of Egypt - which began during clashes in Tahrir Square last month - but an army of restoration workers is working day and night to save the country's written history.

The plain-clothes security guard in the dingy ground-floor office at Egypt's National Archives eyes my camera suspiciously.

On the desk in front of him lies a heavy black revolver. After a brief dispute with my guide and phone calls to his seniors, he reluctantly lets me in.

I am led into an adjoining room where, knee-deep in stacks of newspapers, men and women wearing face masks, rubber gloves and white lab coats are hard at work.


It looks like a cross between a hospital operating theatre and a newspaper printing plant. The smell of singed paper hangs in the air.

From this small room, a vast rescue operation is being mounted to save the ancient books and manuscripts, which were damaged after the country's oldest research institute - the Institut d'Egypte - was firebombed during clashes between demonstrators and the army in central Cairo in December.

Founded by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1798, during the French expedition to Egypt, the institute is one of the oldest academies of arts and sciences outside Europe.

“Some of the books were still smouldering when we opened them - we had to pour water on them to put out the flames”




Indeed it was Napoleon who led the efforts to compile the institute's most prominent work, Le Description d'Egypte, a 23-volume tome dating back to 1809. Describing Egyptian civilisation, nature and contemporary life it was compiled by more than 150 French scholars.

A first edition of the work has been partly damaged in the fire.

The institute held more than 200,000 rare reference books and bound manuscripts dating back to the 1500s, in five languages: Arabic, French, English, German and Russian.

Many are from the 19th Century, the era of the great Victorian explorers of Africa.

Among its collections were handwritten letters, travelogues and tens of thousands of maps, including a 1752 atlas of Upper and Lower Egypt and a German atlas of Egypt and Ethiopia dating back to 1842.
'Tiny bits of history'

Irina Bokova, Unesco's director general, called the fire an "irreversible loss to Egypt and to the world".

The conservation workers at the National Archives wrap copies of books, drenched as the fire was hosed down, in reams of newspaper to soak the moisture from their pages.

Restorers work long hours to try to save books and documents

The packages, like square-shaped bundles of fish and chips, are then sealed in a vacuum pack.

The nearby corridor is lined with heaps of these plastic parcels. Each needs to be opened, checked and repackaged every three days - a painstaking process that will take several weeks, so workers are staying late into the night to finish the job.


Mountains of blackened books and charred paper fill the room.

Everywhere fragments of paper litter the floor - tiny bits of history beyond salvation.

I tiptoe across the room gingerly, all too aware that I am treading on scraps of paper hundreds of years old. It is a sad feeling, like walking over somebody's grave.

In the corner, a worker is layering pages of a large manuscript with sheets of plain paper. The edges of the pages crumble as he lifts them, the fragments settle on the floor where they will gradually disintegrate into dust.

It feels like the un-making of history.
'This is our heritage'

Mona Mohammed Abdo, the head of book restoration at the National Archives, a woman in a blue-green headscarf with twinkling eyes, takes a break from her work to show me around.

"It's a catastrophe," she says. "It's the first time I've worked on anything of this scale. Thirty truckloads of books arrived in the first few days.

"We had nowhere to put them so, at the beginning, to stop them going mouldy, we were forced to resort to natural drying techniques.

"We spread pages across the ground in the garden and on the rooftops of the building to dry. Some of the books were still smouldering when we opened them," she says. "We had to pour water on them to put out the flames."

The Institute held more than 200,000 precious books and documents

Many of the workers helping are not specialists but ordinary Egyptians who have volunteered.

Twenty-four-year-old Bushra, a pharmacist wearing a pale pink headscarf and full-length pastel blue dress, looks up from the papers she is wrapping and smiles at me.

"This is our heritage, our culture. It's really important. I had to come and help. They said it was going to rain soon so we had to move fast to get things out of the archive office's garden."

Just down the road, several weeks on, books still lie beneath the rubble of the institute.

It is right by Tahrir square, where demonstrators opposed to the military council that has ruled Egypt since President Hosni Mubarak's fall, are still camped out making their voices heard.

The continuing protests have hampered rescue efforts and the building itself is said to be in danger of collapsing. The top floor has already caved in.

Many of its books have been lost for ever.

Has the politically correct west gone so far in bending over backwards to islamists that the blame for islamist destruction must be pinned on the relatively small number of western oriented youth?


Well yes, Israel gets this truth bending treatment from Reuters, AP and the BBC all the time. 

 Remember this picture?




This 'iconic' photograph supposedly portraying a dastardly evil settler running down poor defenceless children made headlines throughout the world.

As the Elder of Ziyon explains,  rather than trying to hit the children, the settler was trying to avoid the children who were playing their part in a carefully planned ambush. The children were throwing stones and running towards the car. The photographers were strangely well placed to take the photos and none of the press photos showed the smashed back window of the car.

Of course it was blood libel as are many others emanating out of  'pallywood' aided and abetted by unscrupulous journalists and photographers, willing to peddle any lie if it besmirches Israel.

No comments:

Post a Comment