• Set of Shrine tiles Mumbai, India, 1980s. Tiles from a Parsee household show the constantly burning fire representing Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian god. © Trustees of the British Museum
    Set of Shrine tiles Mumbai, India, 1980s. Tiles from a Parsee household show the constantly burning fire representing Ahura Mazda, the Zoroastrian god. © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Processional Cross, Ethiopia, 19th century. © Trustees of the British Museum
    Processional Cross, Ethiopia, 19th century. © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Christian rosary, Designed by Elsa Peretti for Tiffany & Co., Barcelona, Spain, 21st century. The 52 Indian emeralds are arranged in groups of 10 for the repeated words of the Hail Mary separated by single gems for the Lord’s Prayer. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Christian rosary, Designed by Elsa Peretti for Tiffany & Co., Barcelona, Spain, 21st century. The 52 Indian emeralds are arranged in groups of 10 for the repeated words of the Hail Mary separated by single gems for the Lord’s Prayer. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Lampedusa Cross by Francesco Tuccio Lampedusa, Italy, 2014. When a ship carrying refugees and migrants sank off the island of Lampedusa in October 2013, more than 300 Somali and Eritrean lives, both Muslim and Christian, were lost. Responding to the tragedy, Francesco Tuccio made small crosses, Christian symbols of hope and salvation, for the survivors and to engage people worldwide with the humanitarian disaster. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Lampedusa Cross by Francesco Tuccio Lampedusa, Italy, 2014. When a ship carrying refugees and migrants sank off the island of Lampedusa in October 2013, more than 300 Somali and Eritrean lives, both Muslim and Christian, were lost. Responding to the tragedy, Francesco Tuccio made small crosses, Christian symbols of hope and salvation, for the survivors and to engage people worldwide with the humanitarian disaster. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Miniature prayer book London, UK , 1540–76. This enamelled gold case contains a unique miniature printed book of morning and evening prayers, hymns, psalms and meditations. It was worn on a belt and may have belonged to Queen Elizabeth I. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Miniature prayer book London, UK , 1540–76. This enamelled gold case contains a unique miniature printed book of morning and evening prayers, hymns, psalms and meditations. It was worn on a belt and may have belonged to Queen Elizabeth I. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Guardian lion-dogs By Matsumoto Satoru and Komatsu Miwa Arita, Japan, 2015 Lion-dogs guard people, homes, temples and shrines in Japan, frightening away bad spirits. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Guardian lion-dogs By Matsumoto Satoru and Komatsu Miwa Arita, Japan, 2015 Lion-dogs guard people, homes, temples and shrines in Japan, frightening away bad spirits. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Painted cloth thangka Tibet, 1800–1900. This painted teaching or meditation aid, thangka, shows the wheel of life. The lives of humans and the gods are all held by Yama, Lord of Death, whose limbs represent the sufferings of birth, sickness, old age and death. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Painted cloth thangka Tibet, 1800–1900. This painted teaching or meditation aid, thangka, shows the wheel of life. The lives of humans and the gods are all held by Yama, Lord of Death, whose limbs represent the sufferings of birth, sickness, old age and death. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre Bethlehem, Palestine, 1600–1700 The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is one of the holiest places of Christianity and attracts many pilgrims. Souvenir models of the church are bought and taken all over the world. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre Bethlehem, Palestine, 1600–1700 The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is one of the holiest places of Christianity and attracts many pilgrims. Souvenir models of the church are bought and taken all over the world. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Judas-devil figure Mexico City, Mexico, late 20th century On 31 October every year, Mexicans remember the dead by staying at the graves of loved ones through the night. Theatrical processions symbolise fears and fantasies of the world of the dead. Judas, who denounced Christ to the Roman authorities, is displayed as a devil. Judas figures are also paraded and exploded on Easter Saturday. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Judas-devil figure Mexico City, Mexico, late 20th century On 31 October every year, Mexicans remember the dead by staying at the graves of loved ones through the night. Theatrical processions symbolise fears and fantasies of the world of the dead. Judas, who denounced Christ to the Roman authorities, is displayed as a devil. Judas figures are also paraded and exploded on Easter Saturday. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Festival coat Miao, south-west China, late 20th century The Miao people come together every 13 years to dance, eat, drink and honour their ancestors. Coats and aprons richly embroidered with birds and insects, as well as elaborate silver jewellery, are worn for these Guzhang festivals and for the celebration of New Year. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Festival coat Miao, south-west China, late 20th century The Miao people come together every 13 years to dance, eat, drink and honour their ancestors. Coats and aprons richly embroidered with birds and insects, as well as elaborate silver jewellery, are worn for these Guzhang festivals and for the celebration of New Year. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Memento mori pendant France, 1500–1600 In the late medieval period, reminders that everybody dies helped believers to think of their spiritual rather than worldly wealth. This memento mori pendant contains a tiny skeleton in an enamelled coffin decorated with tongues of fire. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Memento mori pendant France, 1500–1600 In the late medieval period, reminders that everybody dies helped believers to think of their spiritual rather than worldly wealth. This memento mori pendant contains a tiny skeleton in an enamelled coffin decorated with tongues of fire. © the Trustees of the British Museum
  • Fox shrine figure Mikawachi, Japan, 1826–75 The fox is a spirit messenger for Inari, the important Shinto deity for rice, harvests, trade and prosperity. © the Trustees of the British Museum
    Fox shrine figure Mikawachi, Japan, 1826–75 The fox is a spirit messenger for Inari, the important Shinto deity for rice, harvests, trade and prosperity. © the Trustees of the British Museum

British Museum’s Living with Gods exhibition raises questions of faith and humanity


  • English
  • Arabic

It is easy to see why the British Museum must have thought it was on to yet another blockbuster winner with its Living with Gods exhibition.

In some respects, the idea is a re-tread of its highly successful A History of the World in 100 Objects formula – this is the fourth such collaborative project between the British Museum, the BBC and Penguin Books. Once again, the man at the helm is the respected Neil MacGregor, former director of the museum.

As with the previous three-way concepts, this one must have seemed certain to sell many tickets for the museum (at £15 [Dh74] a time for adults), generate lots of radio time for the BBC (the latest 30-part series, which ended on December 1, adds up to 450 minutes of airtime) and sell large numbers of handsomely produced books (available in March at £30 (Dh148) a copy).

It is too early to say how many people listened to the radio programmes or what book sales will look like. But although the exhibition opened only last month, ticket sales are sluggish – there isn't a sold-out day between now and the end of the exhibition on April 8.

One clue as to what might have gone wrong can be found in the suggestion writ large on one wall that perhaps "our species should be known as Homo religious rather than Homo sapiens".  

MacGregor expanded on this in an interview with the BBC. Are humans, he asked, distinguished “not just by a capacity to think, but by our need to believe in a context where the search is not so much for ‘my’ place in the world, but our place in the cosmos, where believing is almost synonymous with belonging?” This perspective manages to achieve the impressive feat of being potentially alienating to believers and non-believers alike. There are other troubling fault lines.

Take the title of the exhibition, which at the very least betrays a certain amount of sloppiness in the collaboration between the BBC and the British Museum.

The former bills it as Living with the Gods, but the museum has it as Living with Gods. Entire post-doctorate dissertations could be written about the semantic, philosophical and theological implications of the presence, or absence, of the definite article.

Less clear are the theological motives, if any, of the people behind the exhibition. No one doubts MacGregor's sincerity as an academic, but not for nothing is he known in Britain's heritage community as "Saint" MacGregor – he is a practising Christian. And then there is John Studzinski, the investment banker whose Genesis Foundation is sponsoring the exhibition: he is a devout Roman Catholic who, according to a 2008 profile in The Daily Telegraph, "disproves the cliché that God and Mammon do not go together".

At first glance, so what? No one could say the show, or the objects it selects from across times and cultures, proselytises on behalf of any religion – but perhaps that in itself is a problem. For the non-believer, the show can be seen as a fascinating, if somewhat randomly selected, collection of interesting curios. But the truly devout of any faith might find take offence at the ultra-ecumenical effort to place all faiths on a par, thus rendering none as significant.

This is, perhaps, further evidence, should any be needed, that Christianity as practised in the West today, particularly in Britain, has become watered down by its desperate need to be seen as all-inclusive.

This debate was thrust into the public domain in 2008 amid reports, eventually denied, that on ascension to the throne, Prince Charles intended to alter his title as Supreme Governor of the Church of England from "Defender of the faith" to "Defender of faiths".

Another flaw at the heart of this exhibition and the radio series that accompanies it is the one that also occasionally undermines the practice of archaeology – the tendency to see patterns, and to leap to grand conclusions, on the basis of the thinnest shred of evidence. The striking Ice Age object that opens the exhibition, and which justifies the “40,000 years of peoples, objects and beliefs” subtitle, is undoubtedly as old as suggested.

The problem is that its suggested association with religion is entirely speculative.

The Lion Man, a 30-centimetre-high figure of what appears to be a man with a lion’s head, carved from a mammoth tusk, was found in pieces in a cave in southern Germany in 1939 and later reassembled. The figure could have any kind of meaning, or none, but MacGregor and the British Museum have chosen to invest it with religious import. 

“The more closely you look at the Lion Man,” insists MacGregor, “the more it’s clear that this is not just the result of an idle hour or two of whimsical whittling.” Indeed, says Jill Cook, the British Museum’s expert in Ice Age art, “this is technically very difficult, artistically brilliant and with this extraordinary sense of power and spirit to it – absolutely a masterpiece”.

One study has suggested that this "masterpiece" would have taken 400 hours to produce. On this basis alone, MacGregor insists the Lion Man "raises a very important question. Why would a community living on the edge of subsistence whose primary concerns were finding food, keeping that fire going, protecting children from predators, allow someone to spend someone to spend so much time away from those tasks?"

Perhaps because 40,000 years ago people had a lot of hours of darkness to kill around that fire, when it would have been unsafe to leave the cave – and what else were they going to do? And why attribute religious significance to it? Perhaps it was merely a toy, made for a child and whittled by firelight in the endless hours of Ice Age downtime.

MacGregor has spoken about humankind’s need to seek out patterns, in “the smallest fragment right up to life on the largest scale… that can be turned perhaps into a coherent understanding, into a narrative of our place in the universe” and declared that “the search for a grand narrative is what this series is about”.

But by placing the Lion Man front and centre in a major exhibition about religion, it is MacGregor who appears to be groping for patterns and meaning.

“We are,” says MacGregor in the last of the 30 radio episodes, “each part of a narrative much bigger than ourselves, members of a community and of a continuity in which there is a shared companionship of purpose [and] all the traditions we have looked at affirm that the life of the individual can be properly lived only in a community and all of them offer ways of making that belief a reality.”

Jean-Paul Sartre, he concludes, “famously observed that hell is other people, but all the narratives and practices that we have looked at argue precisely the contrary, that living properly with other people, living with each other, is the nearest that we can get to heaven”.

Perhaps. But the reality is that there is not a single community of faith on Earth, and MacGregor’s simplistic summing-up fails to take account of the life – and death – experiences of the numberless millions over the millennia who have lost their lives, the victims of conflicts borne out of false interpretations of theology.

For so many, of so many different faiths, peace remains far beyond reach.

Living with Gods – People, Places and Worlds Beyond, is at the British Museum in London until April 8

_________________

Read more:

______________