GLOBALink | Chinese scholars help protect cultural heritage in Afghanistan
In central Afghanistan's Bamyan Valley where stands the famous Buddhas of Bamyan, Abdul Bashir Hemmat was selling tickets for the cultural heritage inside a cool ticket office instead of in the scorching sun. However, that had not always been the case.
"In the past, we worked in the sun, snow and rain," Hemmat said. Things have changed for the better after two ticket offices, which also function as cultural heritage conservation workstations in the daytime, and security guard positions at night, were completed and put into use in May.
They are "built with the assistance of our Chinese friends," and "useful for us and for tourists," Hemmat said, while expressing his gratitude to a group of young scholars from China's Peking University, Lanzhou University, Wenzhou University, the Central Academy of Fine Arts and the Hong Kong-based non-profit Friends of Dunhuang, who have financed the construction.
Bamyan province is famous for many cultural heritages, particularly the two widely-known giant Buddhas. The 53-meter and 35-meter tall Buddha statues, with thousands of caves for monk statues around them, are more than 1,500 years old -- reminders of the Buddhist civilization in the region.
In 2003, the Cultural Landscape and Archaeological Remains of the Bamyan Valley was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Nonetheless, due to years of war and economic hardships, caves in Bamyan Valley were not numbered and cleaned for a long time, let alone being presented with an introduction. The situation that badly hindered heritage protection and further archaeological research has been reversed these days.
Produced by Xinhua Global Service