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King Tut's stolen dad found; Egypt sites to open

CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA   02/17/11 02:27 PM ET   AP

King Tut Father
AP File Photo

CAIRO — Egypt said it will reopen historical sites to tourism on Sunday as it sought to revive a key industry shattered in the turmoil that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. Archaeologists were cheered by the recovery of the most important artifact stolen from Cairo's Egyptian Museum, a rare statue of King Tut's father.

A 16-year-old anti-government protester found the statue of the Pharaoh Akhenaten next to a garbage can and his family returned it, the antiquities ministry said.

But damage to Egypt's heritage may have been greater than previously thought, as officials reported new cases of break-ins at archaeological sites.

Zahi Hawass, head of the Ministry of State for Antiquities, had reported a total of 18 missing museum artifacts, three of which were found on the museum grounds, possibly abandoned by looters making their escape.

The antiquities ministry cited Sabry Abdel-Aziz, head of its pharaonic sector, as saying the tomb of Hetep-Ka, in the ancient burial ground of Saqqara, was broken into and a false door was stolen along with objects stored in the tomb. Also, a portion of a false door was looted from the tomb of Re-Hotep in Abusir, the ministry said.

Many archaeological storehouses were also targeted in break-ins, including ones in Saqqara, and ministry officials were trying to determined what, if anything, was missing. They did not say when exactly the vandalism occurred, but the discoveries were part of an inventory conducted in the wake of 18 days of anti-government protests and the security vacuum surrounding Mubarak's ouster on Feb. 11.

The ministry also said the Egyptian military caught thieves attempting to loot the sites of Tell el-Basta, and a tomb in Lischt.

"There have also been many reports of attacks on archaeological lands through the building of houses and illegal digging," it said.

After police and government officials met to discuss security, Hawass announced that "all of the Pharaonic, Coptic, Islamic, and modern sites will reopen to the public" on Sunday, according to a ministry statement.

The pyramids of Giza are already open, but most tourists fled Egypt earlier this month. An outbreak of labor unrest and uncertainty over a military-supervised political transition indicate tourism is unlikely to recover in the short term.

Egyptian officials had said the magnificent legacy of their ancient civilization emerged largely intact from the chaos in Cairo and elsewhere in the country. The spectacle of civilians forming a human chain to protect the Egyptian Museum testified to a sense of national pride in the past that may have averted more widespread damage.

"Egypt is an outdoor museum," said Dr. Robert Littman, a member of the governing board of the Archaeological Institute of America. "There are thousands of sites everywhere, and inevitably when there's disorder, there's always going to be a few who try to take advantage of the situation."

The most important object that went missing from the Egyptian Museum in the upheaval was the limestone statue of the Akhenaten, father of the famed King Tutankhamen. It depicts the standing pharaoh with a blue crown, holding an offering table in his hands. The table was found separately inside the museum.

The antiquities ministry said a youth found the statue, which has an alabaster base, and his mother contacted her brother, a professor at the American University of Cairo. He, in turn, contacted officials to arrange its return on Wednesday. The statue, about one foot (30 centimeters) tall, will undergo restoration before being returned to its display case.

Littman said the statue was "extremely important" because it is one of the few surviving depictions of Akhenaten, who built the city of Amarna and introduced an early form of monotheism, doing away with the worship of the chief god, Amun.

The king ruled for nearly two decades, and after his death ancient Egyptians went back to worshipping Amun, destroying images and statues of Akhenaten.

"It's one of the few that there is," Littman said of the recovered statue. "It's just terrific."

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
04:38 PM on 02/20/2011
It is a great story.
03:16 PM on 02/18/2011
A 16-year-old anti-government protester found the statue of the Pharaoh Akhenaten next to a garbage can and his family returned it, the antiquities ministry said.
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Akhenaten, the pharaoh that carried out a revolution by moving to monotheism before all others. His successors, returning to polytheism (a counter-revolution), destroyed his works but some pieces survived. Including this image, which, thousands of years later, during a revolution is stolen and found in the trash.
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02:00 PM on 02/18/2011
These Mubarak thugs had no regard for their country, their heritage or their fellow Egyptians. This young man deserves a very large thank you from the world community.
07:11 PM on 02/17/2011
Akhenaten was one of the great kings in mankind's history. Many thanks from all of us who treasure history and art to the teen and his family for returning this priceless statue.
03:17 PM on 02/18/2011
How right you are.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DemFem
05:49 PM on 02/17/2011
An almost 3,500 year old sculpture put out with the trash...nice. This lack of respect for historical treasures sickens me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Olivia Green
Lovin' Life!
05:41 PM on 02/17/2011
Oh wow, I have been worried about all of Egypt's treasures. I am glad they were able to recover this at least.....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Logos Land
U mad?
05:37 PM on 02/17/2011
Wow thats sad, what an important artifact for such an important Pharaoh.
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MISTERUNCONVENTIONAL
The only attitude I've ever had is a bad one.
05:25 PM on 02/17/2011
Tut statues, TARP funds, WMDs, and "The Real Killer"

Besides OJ, who's looking for any of 'em?
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Jim Shaffer
50 yo US citizen, 25 year resident in Bilbao Spain
05:22 PM on 02/17/2011
Akhenaten how ironic. His blasphemous belief in only one god got him erased from nearly all artefacts and parchments, now one of the last remaing artefacts revealing his appearance ends up in the trash. Thank the one god he's been returned.
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Ernst Angst
Recovering Republican. Clean since 1980
05:34 PM on 02/17/2011
Aten, the all-powerful sun-disc, will save us all! Unless he doesn't.
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MISTERUNCONVENTIONAL
The only attitude I've ever had is a bad one.
05:22 PM on 02/17/2011
Authorities are saying the "Tut's father" statue "Walked Off" from an exhibit --- "Like an Egyptian."
AgingLady
laughter is best medicine
05:17 PM on 02/17/2011
I am sorry about the damage to cultural items. And very sorry about the deaths of demonstrators. Hope for things to improve, step by step. Glad this item was recovered. Glad it can be kept in Egypt. So much from Egypt is in other countries.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Anaxamenes
It's not how big your micro-bio is...
05:15 PM on 02/17/2011
I hadn't heard about the "human chain" of civilians that was meant to protect the museum. Every single day, the Egyptians simply amaze me! I hope they have a smooth transition to a more democratic society and people return to appreciate the ancient art treasures there.
04:33 PM on 02/17/2011
It's a damn statue. lol
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
05:01 PM on 02/17/2011
The statue means more to more people than you.........damn inquist
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SusanElizabeth1949
My micro-bio may be empty but my head isn't.
05:22 PM on 02/17/2011
Most of the very naturalistic artwork of the Amarna period was destroyed with the restoration of Amun and his Priesthood after Akhenaten's death.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Ting
04:32 PM on 02/17/2011
By the pharaohs... *crying in corner*
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
relay73
04:31 PM on 02/17/2011
Its amazes me that over 350 people DIED because of the revolutions and yet people still worry about representations of the pharoahs who treated their people worse than Mubarak.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
05:03 PM on 02/17/2011
And you know how they treated the people because....................... you were there.........you're an expert on Egypt.............you're mother told you.................or what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
relay73
10:08 AM on 02/18/2011
Your condescending retort is besides the point. The Egyptian nation needs to recreate itself and cannot afford to rely upon foreigners (tourism) to build itself back up. They need to be "innovative" as Obama so easily says and create new industries that they can manage on their own.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cybersense
05:03 PM on 02/17/2011
Well, it's not so amazing really. The people of Egypt have been creating dedications and pictures of those lost in this uprising. It is very heartfelt. Everyone has a past, btw. It is what you do now and for the future. The historical value is important as well.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
relay73
09:56 AM on 02/18/2011
Maybe Egypt needs to create a solid infrastructure of its own. If they had any industry besides tourism, they would be able to support themselves and this whole damn revolution would never have needed to happen. But of course, the "prized" relics attract foreigners from all over the world to come, eat some food, shit in the bathrooms and leave the country the same exact way it found it. THe egyptians are fighting for jobs right now, to create their own future without a dependency on foreign relations.