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Saturday, 16 March, 2002 Swiss Artist Hopes to Recreate Destroyed Buddha Statues Lisa Schlein Bubendorf, Switzerland 15 Mar 2002 A little over a year
ago, the Taleban destroyed a giant Buddha statue that stood for centuries in a
mountainside near the village of Bamiyan in Afghanistan. Now an architect in
Switzerland is preparing to rebuild the giant statue.
The architect has been intimately involved with Afghanistan since the early 1970's and had even gained the trust of some of the more moderate members of the Taleban. In the late nineties, he was invited to do some preservation work on the big Buddha. "I was there to
reconstruct and to repair the Buddha statues, which were decaying, and a lot of
melting water from snow and rainwater was getting inside the caves and
(damaging) the mural paintings," he recalls. "So, the Afghans did know me and
(of) my interest in Bamiyan, so they asked me to go ahead with such a
project."
To this day, Mr. Bucherer-Dietschi believes it was the foreign-born members of the Taleban who were the driving force behind the decision to destroy the statues. He says most Afghans, including quite a few Taleban, opposed the destruction of the statues. Not too long after the fall of the Taleban, the new authorities in Afghanistan asked the architect to recreate the giant Buddha. He says the preliminary work will be done in his village of Bubendorf in Switzerland, where he has established a museum devoted to the preservation of Afghanistan's culture. He plans to use digital data from photographs of the statue to create a model of the Buddha. "Our intention is to create the reality as close to the original as it was. And, for this, we have to computerize and digitize all the measurements which are existing and then to transfer it back to the reality," he explains. In addition to being expensive - he estimates the model alone will cost $1 million - the architect says recreating the Buddha will be a complex and lengthy affair. But he says the Afghan people, even though they are Muslims, consider the Buddha at Bamiyan part of their cultural heritage and want the project to go ahead. "I asked them what they would prefer. If there would be at the same price, it would be possible to build 30 bridges or one Buddha. And, we did not find one single Afghan who voted for the 30 bridges," he says. After Mr. Bucherer-Dietschi completes his model, he will then move on to the next stage of his project, getting the money to recreate the 53 meter high statue. And once this is done, he can think about returning the Buddha to its place in the mountainside overlooking Bamiyan.
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