History’s missing pages: Iranian academic sliced out sections of priceless collection

by E Wayne Ross on November 21, 2008

The Guardian: History’s missing pages: Iranian academic sliced out sections of priceless collection

• British Library to sue after 150 books are vandalised
• Wealthy scholar pleads guilty and may face prison

To the untrained eye the damage is barely visible. Yet within the handbound pages of books charting how Europeans travelled to Mesopotamia, Persia and the Mogul empire from the 16th century onwards, the damage caused by one Iranian academic to a priceless British Library collection is irreversible.
Jensen: ‘One selfish person was not caring about the rest of us’ Link to this audio

Leading scholars at the library are at a loss to explain why Farhad Hakimzadeh, a Harvard-educated businessman, publisher and intellectual, took a scalpel to the leaves of 150 books that have been in the nation’s collection for centuries. The monetary damage he caused over seven years is in the region of £400,000 but Dr Kristian Jensen, head of the British and early printed collections at the library, said no price could be placed upon the books and maps that he had defaced and stolen.