Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World at the Royal Ontario Museum

The accomplishments of ancient Mesopotamian society are being celebrated in a new Toronto exhibit, but the showcase is also shining a light on a contemporary crisis: the looting and destruction of artifacts, architecture and archeological sites in Syria.

Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World at the Royal Ontario Museum

The Royal Ontario Museum is unveiling Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World this weekend, the sole Canadian venue of the show's international tour.

The exhibition explores more than 3,000 years of the ancient society's story through more than 180 priceless artifacts drawn from the vast collection of the British Museum and bolstered by items from the ROM and museums in Chicago, Philadelphia and Detroit. The ROM's main exhibit has a sister show called Catastrophe, which delves into the looting of Baghdad's Iraq Museum beginning in April 2003.

Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World at the Royal Ontario Museum
Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World explores more than 3,000 years of the ancient society's story through more than 180 priceless artifacts, many never before seen in Canada [Credit:John Rieti/CBC]
Ancient Mesopotamia — encompassing present-day Iraq, northeastern Syria and southeastern Turkey — "is one of the biggest cradles of civilization," said Clemens Reichel, ROM's associate curator for the ancient Near East and professor of Mesopotamian archeology at the University of Toronto.

The teams developing the two exhibits felt strongly about not just exploring the area's past, but also "its present-day challenges," he told CBC News.

Mesopotamia: Inventing Our World at the Royal Ontario Museum
'We shouldn't just talk about the past, we should talk about the present as well,' says ROM Mesopotamian expert Clemens Reichel [Credit: John Rieti/CBC]
Starting in 2003, 15,000 artifacts were stolen from Iraq "and many other terrible things happened in that country — to archeological sites, to its cultural heritage — and we really felt that this point should be brought across in our exhibits. We shouldn't just talk about the past, we should talk about the present as well."

Amid the recent rise in violence in Syria, UNESCO revealed on Thursday that six world heritage sites in the war-ravaged country are in "imminent danger" and need safeguarding from the looting and destruction of valuable artifacts and delicate, ancient sites.