Dear Andrew,

Navigation of the complex issues alluded to in your post has required patient 
and intricate engagement, collaboration and negotiation over 5 years with a 
wide range of stakeholders across institutions and Government agencies in 
Pakistan in compliance with the Government of Pakistan Antiquities Act.

The project has an advisory board consisting of scholars with long experience 
in the field to provide policy guidance and governance on the wide array of 
issues with regards to open access, study, and publication. We will actively 
engage across the spectrum of specialists in Gandhari philology, textual 
studies, digital implementation, collections management and cultural heritage 
as the access and publication policies develop. Rest assured, therefore, that 
all qualified scholars in this field will have the opportunity to participate 
in the ongoing work on these materials.

Best wishes
Mark
(in consultation with members of the GMP Advisory Board and Management 
Committee)


From: Andrew Ollett <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2023 7:05 PM
To: Mark Allon <[email protected]>
Cc: Indology <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Gandhari Manuscript Project

Dear Mark, dear list members,

Thanks for updating on this very significant development.

Two small questions: your message, and the press release, say that this 
donation "sets a precedent for the reversal of the common scenario whereby such 
materials are taken out of their region of origin as part of the antiquities 
trade, resulting in a significant loss of cultural heritage." There are two 
issues here, buying antiquities on the market (or not), and returning them to 
their place of origin (or not). As far as I can understand, the objects in 
question must have been bought from antiquities dealers and subsequently 
donated to the museum. Right? In that case, it's laudable that the objects are 
"returned" to Pakistan (if that is where they are from), but the "common 
scenario" of acquiring such objects through the antiquities trade, and the 
moral and legal hazards that involves, is not really reversed, is it? The buyer 
and the donor are of course left unnamed in the press release, probably for 
this reason.

Second: I assume that the meaning of the sentence "The conservation, 
photography, study, and publication of the manuscripts in the collection will 
be undertaken by the Gandhari Manuscript Project" is that, notwithstanding the 
donation of the physical manuscripts to the Islamabad Museum, nobody outside of 
your group will have access to them until you publish them first? If I wanted 
to see texts in this collection, could I see them in Islamabad? Or could I ask 
the Islamabad Museum for high-resolution photographs?

I of course don't mean to sound accusatory. It's just that the issues in this 
case are very complex.

Andrew

On Tue, Mar 14, 2023 at 8:28 AM Mark Allon via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear List members,

With the support of the Khyentse Foundation, a large collection of Gandhari 
birch bark manuscripts was donated to the Islamabad Museum, Pakistan, on 26 
December 2022. The conservation, photographing, study, and publication of these 
manuscripts by the Gandhari Manuscript Project (GMP) will be carried out under 
the terms of an agreement between the (Federal) Department of Archaeology and 
Museums (DOAM), Islamabad, Pakistan, and the University of Sydney, Australia, 
that was signed on 20 December 2022. Both the Australian High Commission in 
Islamabad, Pakistan, and the Pakistan High Commission in Canberra, Australia, 
assisted its passage.
     Although the collection is yet to be fully conserved, a rough estimate is 
that it consists of at least 50 to 60 scrolls or scroll fragments, which 
constitutes the largest collection of Gandhari manuscripts known to date. These 
manuscripts are thought to have originated from northern Pakistan and to date 
to between the 1st century BCE and the 2nd century CE, although some 
manuscripts in the collection may well fall outside this range.
     The housing of these Gandhari manuscripts in Pakistan at the Islamabad 
Museum and their conservation there sets a precedent for the reversal of the 
common scenario whereby such materials are taken out of their region of origin 
as part of the antiquities trade, resulting in a significant loss of cultural 
heritage. In addition, this initiative will form the basis for collaboration 
with Pakistani scholars and for training Pakistani students in order to promote 
the conservation and study of such materials and the documentation of 
Pakistan’s rich Buddhist heritage.
     A more comprehensive account of the texts in the collection, their date 
and their significance, and of the collection as a whole, will be possible once 
all scrolls and scroll fragments have been conserved and an initial survey has 
been undertaken.
     For further details on the collection and the Gandhari Manuscript Project, 
see https://gandhari-texts.sydney.edu.au/gandhari-manuscripts/.
     The Khyentse Foundation recently posted notification on their 
website<https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/Y8GQC6XQ4LfPA6w12fp3ns-?domain=khyentsefoundation.org>.

Best wishes

Gandhari Manuscript Project Management Committee

Mark Allon, Stephanie Majcher, Ian McCrabb, Jason Neelis


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