Cultural devastation
April 13, 2009For the past several weeks, more than 60 firemen and volunteers have been spending most of their days at the site where the archive once stood. With scoops, cranes and even their bare hands, they search through the rubble not for bodies, but for paper.
That is because the documented history of the entire region now lays buried under 60 tons of rock and other debris.
"Today we just found a document from the 11th century," said Cologne fireman Thomas Buergermann. "This is what we are doing, looking and searching for archival material, 12 hours a day every day, with the exception of Sunday."
Since the collapse of the archive building on March 3, workers have been present at the site. They plan to stay until the last document has been uncovered.
"We'll do this job until the last historical items have been found, said Johannes Feirer, Cologne's deputy fire chief. "I think that we have already recovered more than half of the historical materials," he said.
A "safe haven" for uncovered documents
The archive materials are being brought to a furniture warehouse located about 20 kilometers outside of Cologne. As soon as the firemen find something they believe to be of significance, they record exactly where in the rubble they found the item, pack it in a box, and ship it to the furniture warehouse in Porz, one of the city's suburbs.
In the long halls of the warehouse, there are hundreds of boxes full of random parchments, scrolls, papers, and books. Some are clean and dry, others dirty and wet. Dressed in white plastic suits and wearing hoods and protective masks, archivists, restorers, and volunteers from the Rhineland and beyond have come here to begin the mindboggling task of preserving and organizing the recovered materials.
The archivists and restorers are especially concerned with water-damaged documents. For once the document begins to mold, the chance of preserving it is next to none. Archivists use dry ice to freeze documents before they can begin the long process of being restored.
Documents that were exposed to water while buried under the rubble must remain frozen for months before being dried. This is the only way to prevent mold from forming.
Max Plassman, one of four main archivists responsible for the preservation of the recovered documents, said this process would be unthinkable without the help of volunteers.
"We have to stress the fact that most of the work here is done by volunteers," he said. "It is a very important fact for us, because we couldn't handle this process on our own. They are turning up daily by the hundreds here. It's unbelievable."
Crucial to the Rhineland
The efforts to preserve the documents of Cologne's archive are really efforts to preserve Cologne's history, which dates back to the Roman Empire.
For the historians of the Rhineland, the archive collapse is especially devastating. For the region's universities, the preservation of recovered documents is absolutely critical.
"You have to understand that the history of our region, the Rhineland, is influenced very much by Cologne, which was and is the largest city in the area," said Andreas Rutz, an assistant professor of history at the University of Bonn.
"We have a number of PhD students working on Cologne subjects. They're writing their dissertations on the history of Cologne. For them above all it's a big catastrophe. They have no chance of actually finishing their dissertations the way they planned to. So for them it would be great, if these things were found. Because then they would be able to continue."
Author: Gabriel Borrud
Editor: Chuck Penfold