By The Art Newspaper
Vincent Noce
Aliph, a Geneva-based global fund to protect cultural heritage in war zones, spearheaded by France and the United Arab Emirates and chaired by the American billionaire Thomas Kaplan, has revealed its first projects. They include the Mosul museum and the Behnam monastery in Iraq, as well as the Tomb of Askia in Gao, Mali. The organisation has also launched a worldwide call for new projects.
Vincent Noce
Aliph, a Geneva-based global fund to protect cultural heritage in war zones, spearheaded by France and the United Arab Emirates and chaired by the American billionaire Thomas Kaplan, has revealed its first projects. They include the Mosul museum and the Behnam monastery in Iraq, as well as the Tomb of Askia in Gao, Mali. The organisation has also launched a worldwide call for new projects.
Originally
proposed at an international conference in Abu Dhabi in 2016,
Aliph—named after the first letter of the Arabic alphabet—has raised
$60m so far, according to Aliph’s director Valéry Freland, a French
diplomat.
For the Mosul
museum, Aliph is funding the $480,000 preparatory study for its
restoration, with technical support provided by the Louvre and the
Smithsonian Institute. It also plans to cover at least part of the
restoration works which, according to rough estimates, could amount to
$6m-$10m.
South of
Mosul, Aliph is financing the $250,000 reconstruction of the Mar Behnam
monastery. Partially destroyed by Islamic State in 2015, it formerly
housed one of the most important Syriac libraries in the world. Work on
the fourth-century Assyrian church, library and tomb, led by the French
architect Guillaume de Beaurepaire and the archaeologist Abdelsalam
Simaan, with the help of the French NGO Fraternity in Iraq, has now
been completed. Freland underscores the symbolic importance of this
first accomplishment by the fund in a sacred place of pilgrimage for
Syriac Catholics and Yazidis, as well as Muslims.
In
Gao, Aliph is financing the $500,000 damage-and-repairs assessment of
the 15th-century Askia tomb. After the occupation of Northern Mali by
militants in 2012-13, the mosque and necropolis of the Songhai Empire’s
leading dynasty have been on the brink of collapse.
New
projects can now also be submitted via Aliph’s interactive site
(aliph-foundation.org). “They can come from any part of the world and
include a wide range of actions, from protection of sites at risk to
intangible heritage traditions,” Freland says. “We want to act
swiftly,” he says, likening the fund to a “cultural start up”.
Management costs must be kept under 10% of the proposed budgets. Aliph
also wants to open an emergency response programme for projects under
$75,000, which could be immediately initiated by its director.
The fund aims to work with a permanent team of no more than six people
based
in Geneva. Prior to joining Aliph, Freland was a councillor of the
French Culture Minister before being charged with cultural cooperation
in Tunis from 2010 to 2016, at the time of the Arab Spring. He works
together with France Desmarais, a Canadian lawyer previously employed
by the International Council of Museums.
In
the first instance, Aliph is focusing on countries such as Iraq, Mali,
Afghanistan and Libya, and is hoping to work in Syria as soon as
possible. Apart from fears around safety, Freland says that a major
challenge will be the availability of logistics and operational
personnel to assist on the ground. His next mission is a global
fundraising tour to further boost Aliph’s coffers.
France
has already provided $30m, Saudi Arabia $10m, the Emirates $7.5m,
Qatar $5m, Luxembourg $2.2m, Morocco $1.5m and China $1m. Three
sponsors, the Mellon Foundation, Thomas Kaplan and Jean-Claude Gandur,
an oil trader and Swiss collector, contributed a total of $2m.