Look after those pre-historic temples
I am a Canadian who loves Malta. I have visited three times, the last visit being in September to attend the conference on the pre-historic temples sponsored by the Old Temple Study Foundation and I intend to visit again soon. I find Malta beautiful...
I am a Canadian who loves Malta. I have visited three times, the last visit being in September to attend the conference on the pre-historic temples sponsored by the Old Temple Study Foundation and I intend to visit again soon. I find Malta beautiful and comfortable, its people friendly and helpful and its culture and history inspiring.
I am very grateful that the Maltese government has made many of the island's historic sites available to visitors and in such an attractive way.
I write now, however, out of my regard for the pre-historic temples. I wish to add my voice to those numbering in the thousands, I understand, who are expressing deep concern about the possibility of using a nearby quarry in the area of Hagar Qim and Mnajdra as a rubbish landfill. I am aware of and applaud wholeheartedly the government's plan to design protective shelters but remain concerned about the effect of a landfill so very close to the temples.
As Unesco-designated world heritage sites, Hagar Qim and Mnajdra deserve the utmost in protection, preservation and responsible management. The transporting and dumping of waste material near these two precious sites jeopardise their survival in at least two ways. First, the actual repeated transporting and unloading of large volumes of material over a two-year period threaten the very stability of the megaliths; secondly, in the absence of a system of effective waste separation, the integrity of the soil and, eventually, of the megaliths themselves is at risk.
The government of Malta must consider alternatives to this proposed initiative for waste disposal. There is no doubt that an appropriate solution is a challenge in a country as small as Malta but the outstanding universal value of the temples must be honoured for our sake and our children's sake ad infinitum.
I am concerned as well about the conflict between the Maltese hunters and those who cherish and wish to visit the temples, two groups with very different interests.
I understand that the shooting of migrating birds has been legislated against but that the practice continues nonetheless. I am aware of an instance in which hunters are alleged to have threatened visitors to the temples, believing them to be interfering with successful hunting. For the sake of the temples and the long view of what is valuable to humankind, I ask that the government of Malta also addresses and resolves this very difficult matter.