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By Chad Bouchard
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
04 June 2006
Pieces of destroyed columns are seen scattered1 at a damaged Hindu temple in Prambanan, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Parts of the world famous Prambanan temple complex in Central Java crumbled2 during last week's 6.3 magnitude earthquake. Archaeologists are assessing damage to the UNESCO World Heritage site, but fear the foundations of the ancient stone structures may be severely3 weakened.
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A groundskeeper crouches4 next to one of the crumbling5 shrines6 at the Prambanan site, cutting the grass with a sickle7. It is eerily8 quiet at the 10th century Hindu compound just a week after the earthquake struck - sending hundreds of intricately carved stones to the ground.
This is the largest temple complex in Indonesia dedicated9 to the Hindu divinity of Shiva. It has eight main structures and more than 250 smaller ones. The compound underwent extensive reconstruction10 from 1918 to 1953 and now much of that work has been undone11.
One of many archaeologists studying the site, Aristia Studi, says the first priority will be to stabilize12 the damaged structures and find out how deeply the foundation may have shifted from the quake.
She says if the largest buildings need reconstruction, it will take lot of time to restore depending on how many people can be deployed13 to work on the site.
Herdi Bramasudi, with the Yogyakarta Tourism and Archaeological Agency, says the next few years will be painstaking14 and require a massive effort, as archaeologists may have to rebuild the site from the ground up.
She says seeing the Prambanan complex in such a condition is heartbreaking.
"I feel like I will cry all the time. Because we have - we already love the temple," she said.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhuyono last week called for UNESCO to help Indonesia rebuild the site.
The temple complex brings vital tourism money to central Java. Yogyakarta is second only to Bali among Indonesian tourist attractions, with more than a million visitors a year.
Officials with the country's Archaeological Conservation Agency say damage assessment15 will take months to complete, during which time the site will be closed to the public.
The site is considered to be one of the most important examples of Hindu architecture, and serves as a reminder of the predominantly Muslim country's Hindu past
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