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About
Dr. Donny George
Former Director-General of Iraqi Museums
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The life of
Dr. Donny George is interwoven with some of the world's
most famous antiquities and archaeological sites and with
the international struggle to save the world’s threatened
cultural patrimony. A native of Al-Anbar Province, Iraq,
Dr. George received his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. credentials
in prehistoric archaeology at the University of Baghdad
and carried out archaeological fieldwork at such fabled
sites as Nineveh and Babylon, where he served as Field
Director for site restoration.
Dr. George, a Christian, was a mid-level official in the
Baath Party under Saddam Hussein’s government, serving
as Director-General of Iraqi Museums from 2003 until 2005.
As Director of the National Museum at the time U.S. forces
entered Baghdad in 2003, he further distinguished himself
in his attempts to protect the museum’s priceless
collections from the looting that followed. After the
looting of the Baghdad Museum, Dr. George’s name
appeared in newspapers the world over as the international
press struggled to comprehend and to document this historic
tragedy.
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In the years since the Baghdad looting, Dr. George’s
tireless efforts were instrumental in the recovery of nearly
half of the more than 15,000 stolen cultural objects, including
many of ancient Mesopotamia’s most important treasures.
Through his continuing efforts as an advocate for the recovery
and protection of antiquities generally, Dr. George has
since become the international face of the plight of ancient
archaeological sites throughout Iraq and the “Fertile
Crescent,” which suffer today as extensive, organized
site-looting continues.
In 2005 Dr. George became Chairman of the prestigious Iraqi
State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, but in 2006 was
forced by death threats to flee his native country. From
relative safety in Damascas, Dr. George and his family eventually
found refuge in this country, where he is currently Visiting
Professor at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
Since his arrival in the U.S., Dr. George has been busy
speaking to international audiences about the destruction
of Iraq’s cultural heritage, and he works to raise
public awareness about ongoing threats to the world’s
irreplaceable cultural record. In carrying out this important
work, Dr. George has lectured internationally in Belgium,
Denmark, Germany, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Spain, Sweden, and
the UK. He also has spoken widely in this country, with
public engagements in Boston, Chicago, New York City, Philadelphia,
Phoenix, Taos, and elsewhere.
In May 2008, Archaeological Legacy Institute (ALI) will
host Dr. George’s first West Coast appearance, where
he will deliver the opening address for the fifth anniversary
of The Archaeology Channel International Film and Video
Festival, in Eugene, Oregon. ALI is honored and delighted
that Dr. George has accepted this invitation. It is with
great pleasure that we welcome him to Eugene and to Oregon
as distinguished Keynote Speaker for the Western Hemisphere’s
only juried competition of international archaeological
film. |
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