The
myth of red mercury, a substance supposedly found in the throats of ancient
Egyptian mummies, is still widespread in Egypt, writes Zahi Hawass.
The
stories of tomb robberies are amazing but also tragic. The robbers do not
realise that by cutting scenes and reliefs out from ancient temples and tombs
they are damaging not only the history of Egypt but also that of the world as a
whole.
During
the 25 January Revolution, Egypt went through difficult times. On 28 January
2011, over 1,000 people sneaked into the Egyptian Museum in Cairo’s Tahrir
Square. That night, the police had left Cairo and the city did not have a
single policeman on the streets. We have to thank God for saving the museum,
because the people who sneaked inside it did not find the gold room or the room
containing the golden mask of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun.
When
we entered the museum the next day, we found many gilded statues thrown on the
ground. But the museum as a whole was saved because the mummy room was locked
and the building was dark, so the robbers could not find its location. If these
people had found the mummy room, the royal mummies could have been destroyed.
“Red
mercury”, one of the things the robbers may have been looking for, is a mythic
substance for many Egyptians. They believe that in the throats of mummies there
is a liquid called red mercury. If someone possesses this liquid, he or she
will be able to control the spirits and become rich. Of course, there is no
such thing as red mercury, but many people still believe in it all over Egypt.
A daughter of a friend of mine called me one day and said that her father had
held a zar (a kind of religious ceremony) at his house and brought in a
Moroccan magician who had made her father believe that he could summon up the
djinn, or spirits, to provide him with red mercury.
The
secretary of an Arab prince also once called me and said the prince would like
to meet me. I agreed. The prince came and said that he would make the story
short. “My mother is very sick, and we have taken her to doctors in Egypt and
all over the world, but she is still sick. A sheikh who lives near us told me
that the remedy for my mother was in the hands of Zahi Hawass.” I did not know
what to say, because I did not understand why he was telling me what he was
saying. “I am an Egyptologist and not a doctor,” I said.
A
few months later, he called me one evening and said he wanted to see me. On his
arrival he said, “I have $100,000 in my bag. If you will give me some of the
liquid you have, I have the same amount at my hotel.” I realised that he was
referring to red mercury. I told the prince that there was no such thing as red
mercury. I found out from the prince that the reason he had come to me was
because I had been working on a major excavation called the Valley of the
Golden Mummies in the Bahareya Oasis and had found a large cemetery full of
mummies dating to the Roman period and covered with gold.
The
people of Bahareya had become rich because of the production of wine, and it
was wine that everyone in ancient Egypt wanted to drink in the afterlife. The
discovery of the mummies happened by accident when the antiquities guard of the
Temple of Alexander the Great in the Oasis had been riding his donkey whose leg
fell into a hole. He looked inside and saw mummies covered in gold. We
excavated the discovery, which the foreign press called the “Tutankhamun of the
Greek and Roman Period”... READ MORE.