Searching for Buddha in Afghanistan
An archaeologist insists a third giant statue lies near the cliffs where the Bamiyan Buddhas, destroyed in 2001, once stood
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Alex Masi
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
Clad in a safari suit, sun hat, hiking boots and leather gloves, Zemaryalai Tarzi leads the way from his tent to a rectangular pit in the Bamiyan Valley of northern Afghanistan. Crenulated sandstone cliffs, honeycombed with man-made grottoes, loom above us. Two giant cavities about a half-mile apart in the rock face mark the sites where two huge sixth-century statues of the Buddha, destroyed a decade ago by the Taliban, stood for 1,500 years. At the base of the cliff lies the inner sanctum of a site Tarzi calls the Royal Monastery, an elaborate complex erected during the third century that contains corridors, esplanades and chambers where sacred objects were stored.
"We're looking at what used to be a chapel covered with murals," the 71-year-old archaeologist, peering into the pit, tells me. Rulers of the Buddhist kingdom—whose religion had taken root across the region along the Silk Road—made annual pilgrimages here to offer donations to the monks in return for their blessings. Then, in the eighth century, Islam came to the valley, and Buddhism began to wane. "In the third quarter of the ninth century, a Muslim conqueror destroyed everything—including the monastery," Tarzi says. "He gave Bamiyan the coup de grâce, but he couldn't destroy the giant Buddhas." Tarzi gazes toward the two empty niches, the one to the east 144 feet high and the one to the west 213 feet high. "It took the Taliban to do that."
The Buddhas of Bamiyan, carved out of the cliff's malleable rock, long presided over this peaceful valley, protected by its near impregnable position between the Hindu Kush mountains to the north and the Koh-i-Baba range to the south. The monumental figures survived the coming of Islam, the scourge of Muslim conqueror Yaqub ibn Layth Saffari, the invasion and annihilation of virtually the entire Bamiyan population by Mongol warriors led by Genghis Khan in A.D. 1221 and the British-Afghan wars of the 19th century. But they couldn't survive the development of modern weaponry or a fanatical brand of Islam that gained ascendancy in Afghanistan following the war between the Soviet Union and the mujahedeen in the 1980s: almost ten years ago, in March 2001, after being denounced by Taliban fanatics as "false idols," the statues were pulverized with high explosives and rocket fire. It was an act that generated worldwide outrage and endures as a symbol of mindless desecration and religious extremism.
From almost the first moment the Taliban were driven from power at the end of 2001, art historians, conservationists and others have dreamed of restoring the Buddhas. Tarzi, however, has another idea. Somewhere in the shadow of the niches, he believes, lies a third Buddha—a 1,000-foot-long reclining colossus built at roughly the same time as the standing giants. His belief is based on a description written 1,400 years ago by a Chinese monk, Xuanzang, who visited the kingdom for several weeks. Tarzi has spent seven years probing the ground beneath the niches in search of the fabled statue. He has uncovered seven monasteries, fragments of a 62-foot-long reclining Buddha and many pieces of pottery and other Buddhist relics.
But other scholars say the Chinese monk may have mistaken a rock formation for the sculpture or was confused about the Buddha's location. Even if the reclining Buddha once existed, some hypothesize that it crumbled into dust centuries ago. "The Nirvana Buddha"—so called because the sleeping Buddha is depicted as he was about to enter the transcendent state of Nirvana—"remains one of archaeology's greatest mysteries," says Kazuya Yamauchi, an archaeologist with the Japan Center for International Cooperation in Conservation, who has carried out his own search for it. "It is the dream of archaeologists to find it."
Time may be running out. Ever since U.S., coalition and Afghan Northern Alliance forces pushed the Taliban out of Afghanistan, remote Bamiyan—dominated by ethnic Hazaras who defied the Pashtun-dominated Taliban regime and suffered massacres at their hands—has been an oasis of tranquillity. But this past August, insurgents, likely Taliban, ambushed and killed a New Zealand soldier in northern Bamiyan—the first killing of a soldier in the province since the beginning of the war. "If the Taliban grows stronger elsewhere in Afghanistan, they could enter Bamiyan from different directions," says Habiba Sarabi, governor of Bamiyan province and the country's sole female provincial leader. Residents of Bamiyan—as well as archaeologists and conservationists—have lately been voicing the fear that even if new, reconstructed Buddhas rise in the niches, the Taliban would only blow them up again.
To visit Tarzi on his annual seven-week summer dig in Bamiyan, the photographer Alex Masi and I left Kabul at dawn in a Land Cruiser for a 140-mile, eight-hour journey on a dirt road on which an improvised explosive device had struck a U.N. convoy only days before. The first three hours, through Pashtun territory, were the riskiest. We drove without stopping, slumped low in our seats, wary of being recognized as foreigners. After snaking through a fertile river valley hemmed in by jagged granite and basalt peaks, we arrived at a suspension bridge marking the start of Hazara territory. "The security situation is now fine," our driver told us. "You can relax."
At the opening of the Bamiyan Valley, we passed a 19th-century mud fort and an asphalt road, part of a $200 million network under construction by the U.S. government and the Asian Development Bank. Then the valley widened to reveal a scene of breathtaking beauty: golden fields of wheat, interspersed with green plots of potato and bordered by the snowcapped, 18,000-foot peaks of the Hindu Kush and stark sandstone cliffs to the north. Finally we came over a rise and got our first look at the gaping cavities where the giant Buddhas once stood.
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Comments (6)
The only treasures which can truly be protected from those who would unwrite our collective past are the ones that aren't known. In 2001 the Taliban destroyed two 1,500 year-old statues of Buddha (SOSA)
Posted by Bill on February 27,2013 | 09:49 AM
I was fortunate to have visited Bamiyan area in May 1974 and viewed the lovely valley and Buddha sculptures intact. My collection of slides from this visit tug at a memory of what was a treasure and now gone. Sadness fills my heart of what was lost to other generations.
Posted by Mary on February 17,2011 | 08:11 PM
The only treasures which can truly be protected from those who would unwrite our collective past are the ones that aren't known. In 2001 the Taliban destroyed two 1,500 year-old statues of Buddha; monumental artifacts falling to a momentary act of indignance, embarassment or insecurity. Zemaryalai Tarzi is intent on finding a purported third. If he succeeds, and the Taliban then retakes Bamiyan, that icon will likely suffer the same fate, lost for the very fact that he found it. In that regard, his actions seem no less short-sighted than theirs. Either that, or the quest of a man more interested in claiming a footnote to history than preserving the thing he professes to value.
Posted by Dan Wetmore on January 4,2011 | 12:08 AM
While I like the every word of the article and I enjoyed it as it has to do a lot to my own heritage, I must say that we have gone astray here. Our patron Saint as Aurel Stein called Huen Tsang may have gone erratic while mentioning the third Buddha in the 'vicinity'. This does not mean in real vicinity but it could be farther not very far from the banks of Oxus river. I believe on our ignorance of the Soviet period archaeology that we have still not cared to unravel their expeditions in these regions. I am convinced that the third Buddha which was discovered from Ajina Tepe near Kurgan Tepe south of Dushanbe now sleeping on the second floor of the Museum of Antiquities in Dushanbe is the one mentioned by Huen Tsang. This part of Tajikistan is very important and is rich in archaeology. On both the sides of Oxus river existed sites earlier than 6th BC - the temple of Oxus(Takht-i-Sangin)and across the river Ai Khanum sites and may be more are very rich. Moreover I believe on the way of the Pamir branch of the Great Silk Road, lie many uncovered sites and this could be a probable route of our patron saint who had travelled down through difficult mountains from present day Taxkorgan in the Chinese Pamir. These sites were very much inter-connected since the Kushan times and Huen Tsang in 7th AD came down from here to Bamiyan. He describes Buddhism in decadent state where the monasteries had lost their importance and the monks reduced to mere caretakers. I can send the photos of sleeping Buddha of Ajina Tepe if required. We must pay attention to exhibits of this Museum as it has a lot to do with Indo-Bactrian artifacts down to Kushan periods.
Posted by Zia on December 20,2010 | 07:04 AM
this is an interesting article
Posted by alejandro on December 15,2010 | 02:23 PM
What are the latitude/longitude of the cliff cavities for the former statues?
Posted by Richard Hintz on December 8,2010 | 12:15 PM