22:05:2009 - 05:05 EEST
 
  • News in English
    SAE President Stefanos P. Tamvakis visited the Greeks in Lebanon responding to an invitation by the president of the Greek Community in Beirut Panagiotis Andriotis.
  • News in English
    The Pan-Pontian Federation of America in cooperation with the Pontic associations and the Federation of Hellenic Societies of NY organized a lecture a the Stathakeio Cultural Center in Astoria.
  • News in English
    The Hellenic Times Scholarship Fund held its annual dinner dance which was attended by many outstanding personalities of the Greek-American community, politicians and persons from the art world.
  • News in English
    South Australian State Labor minister, Michael Atkinson, has inflamed tensions between Turkey and Canberra about a "genocide" by accepting an invitation to address a 20,000-strong rally in Greece on the sensitive issue.
  • News in English
    In an article in Australia's "The Age" newspaper entitled "Britain runs out of excuses for keeping Elgin Marbles" underlines that the opening of the New Acropolis Museum will minimize the British Museums argument that it is the best place to house the marbles that were removed from the Acropolis by Lord Elgin.

15

05

2009

Australian newspaper "The Age" in favor of Marbles return to Greece
Συντάχθηκε απο τον/την Θεόφιλος Δουμάνης   
In an article in Australia's "The Age" newspaper entitled "Britain runs out of excuses for keeping Elgin Marbles" underlines that the opening of the New Acropolis Museum will minimize the British Museums argument that it is the best place to house the marbles that were removed from the Acropolis by Lord Elgin.
According to the article, for two centuries, Britain has held on to a collection of ancient treasures from Greece, defying the latter's moral claim to the sculptures known as the Elgin Marbles. Even that popular name, after the British ambassador who took them from the fabled Parthenon temple in Athens, singularly fails to acknowledge the place of the statuary in Greek heritage. Pericles commissioned the series of sculpted panels in the 5th century BC to commemorate his victory against Persia. They did so for 2300 years at the Parthenon until Lord Elgin, ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, came along in 1801, when Athens was under enemy occupation, and took them.
 
Since 1816, when the British Museum bought the statuary for £35,000 after Parliament voted to acquire them for the nation, Britain has played the role of custodian, preserving these treasures for posterity. Had Britain been occupied and the treasures of Buckingham Palace removed across the channel, one doubts the British would ever have seen this as anything but looting, however the "custodians" dressed it up. In any case, the marbles were damaged by attempts to "clean" them in the 1930s.
 
Next month, the opening of the Acropolis Museum, with reserved space for the missing works that exactly matches the Parthenon temple dimensions, will further weaken Britain's tenuous claim to be best placed to look after these treasures. Greece, which retains 36 of the 115 panels in the Parthenon frieze, will be able to display the 160-metre-long work better than the British Museum could ever do. Fears of setting a precedent - which could, for instance, affect many of the 40,000 Aboriginal artefacts held overseas - do not alter the original wrongs committed in the service of the British Empire. With most Britons supporting the Greek claim, Britain ought finally to return its ill-gotten "marbles" to where they belong.

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