Paris exhibition showcases Gaza’s endangered archaeological treasures saved from destruction

An exhibition opened this month at Paris’s Insтιтut du Monde Arabe (IMA) that offers a glimpse of Gaza’s archaeological heritage against the background of relentless warfare and destruction in the region. тιтled “Rescued Treasures of Gaza: 5,000 Years of History,” the exhibition runs until November 2, 2025, and features over 130 artifacts that attest to the rich and complex history of Gaza as a crossroads of culture and commerce between Asia, Africa, and the Mediterranean.

Paris exhibition showcases Gaza’s endangered archaeological treasures saved from destructionRoman colossal marble statue of Zeus from Gaza, Palestine, Roman Imperial period, 2nd c. CE. Credit: Dan Diffendale, Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

The artifacts—spanning from Roman oil lamps and terracotta amphoras to a sixth-century Byzantine church mosaic and a Greek-inspired statuette of Aphrodite—tell Gaza’s history from the Bronze Age to the Persian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Mamluk, and Ottoman periods. The majority of the items were excavated in the 1990s during Franco-Palestinian joint archaeological missions, shortly after the 1993 Oslo Accords.

Most of the collection had been acquired by Palestinian collector and businessman Jawdat Khoudary, and he stored the artifacts in his private museum in Gaza. During 2006, some 260 of the items were dispatched to Geneva to be used in an exhibition, which had been sponsored by the Museum of Art and History (MAH). They were meant to return to a future museum in Gaza, but those plans were derailed when Hamas seized power in 2007 and Israel and Egypt imposed a blockade. The crates remained stored in Geneva for nearly two decades.

“Paradoxically, being locked up in a faraway storage facility has ensured the survival of part of Khoudary’s collection,” MAH curator Béatrice Blandin said. She added that the artifacts were only awaiting authorization to return home.

Paris exhibition showcases Gaza’s endangered archaeological treasures saved from destructionMosaic from the ancient synagogue in Gaza. Credit: Dr. Avishai Teicher / CC BY 2.5

The current exhibition originated from a project that had been canceled for a show on Lebanon’s ancient site of Byblos due to Israeli bombing in Beirut.

The exhibition does not shy away from contemporary realities. A special section brings to the fore the devastating impact of the Israel-Hamas war, which began on October 7, 2023. According to UNESCO, as of March 2025, 94 cultural and archaeological sites in Gaza have been reported damaged, including the ancient Greek port of Anthedon, the 13th-century palace of al-Basha, and the Byzantine-era al-Omari mosque.

Paris exhibition showcases Gaza’s endangered archaeological treasures saved from destructionA coin from Gaza, fourth century BCE, the period of the Jewish subjection to the last of the Persian kings. Public domain

“The priority is obviously human lives, not heritage,” Elodie Bouffard, curator of the exhibition, told AFP. “But we also wanted to show that, for millennia, Gaza was the endpoint of caravan routes, a port that minted its own currency, and a city that thrived at the meeting point of water and sand.”

The exhibition serves both as a celebration of Gaza’s resilient cultural heritage and a sobering reminder of what can be lost.

Related Posts

Roman-era settlement and mysterious burial unearthed in Delbrück-Bentfeld

Roman-era settlement and mysterious burial unearthed in Delbrück-Bentfeld

Archaeologists in the eastern German village of Delbrück-Bentfeld have completed a months-long excavation that uncovered a multi-period Roman-era settlement and a well-preserved burial ground, providing rich insights…

6,200-year-old ‘cone-headed’ skull found in Iran reveals cranial modification and death by blunt force

6,200-year-old ‘cone-headed’ skull found in Iran reveals cranial modification and death by blunt force

Archaeologists excavating a prehistoric cemetery in Chega Sofla, western Iran, uncovered the skull of a young woman who died over 6,000 years ago in violent circumstances. Not…

France’s deepest shipwreck found: 16th-century vessel discovered off Ramatuelle

France’s deepest shipwreck found: 16th-century vessel discovered off Ramatuelle

Archaeologists have uncovered the deepest known shipwreck in French territorial waters—more than 2.5 kilometers (approximately 8,200 feet) deep under the Mediterranean Sea, off the Ramatuelle coast close…

Mysterious pits on 2-million-year-old fossil teeth unlock clues to human evolution

Mysterious pits on 2-million-year-old fossil teeth unlock clues to human evolution

The bizarre pattern of tiny pits on fossil teeth, once thought to be signs of disease or malnutrition, might actually hold a genetic key to unlocking our…

Gold coins may reveal idenтιтy of San José galleon, the ‘world’s richest shipwreck

Gold coins may reveal idenтιтy of San José galleon, the ‘world’s richest shipwreck

Over 300 years after a fateful demise, new evidence is supporting the identification of a Colombian Caribbean shipwreck as the legendary San José galleon—a Spanish 18th-century warship…

Fried thrushes were ancient Roman street food in Mallorca, not just an elite delicacy

Fried thrushes were ancient Roman street food in Mallorca, not just an elite delicacy

A recent archaeological discovery in the ancient Roman city of Pollentia on the Spanish island of Mallorca is rewriting the history of Roman culinary habits. Researchers have…