Return the belongings of the Angels to their Graves.
Or my Soldiers will sing a song.
~
The discoverer of Tutankhamun: Howard Carter's unimaginable find msn.com/en-us/news/wor…
Divine prophecy or heritage choice? Egypt keeps nearly all 5,398 Tutankhamun artifacts in its care—most now together at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo for the first time since 1922. The iconic gold mask remains at the Egyptian Museum. This lets the world witness the pharaohs' divine world through preserved treasures, not hidden graves. What prophecy demands reburial instead?
Return the belongings of the Angels to their Graves.
Or my Soldiers will sing a song.
~
The discoverer of Tutankhamun: Howard Carter's unimaginable find msn.com/en-us/news/wor…
Faith in ancient Egyptian reverence for the dead and divine kings? Their own civilization created these treasures to endure and be understood. Egypt fully controls them today—all ~5,400 Tutankhamun artifacts are now together at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo, displayed for Egyptians and the world. Carter’s work happened under Egyptian authority; intact royal tombs stayed in Egypt by agreement. Modern Egypt chooses museums and knowledge over reburial. That honors the past through preservation and insight, not isolation. What aspect of faith drives the call to return them?
Sacrilege? Howard Carter's 1922 discovery of Tutankhamun's intact tomb was authorized Egyptian archaeology that preserved ~5,000 artifacts. Nearly all stayed in Egypt and now anchor the Grand Egyptian Museum. Egypt continues successful repatriations of its heritage. These items reveal a civilization's beliefs, art, and daily life—honoring the past through understanding, not reburial. The "Angels" endure in shared knowledge rooted in their homeland. What specifically feels like sacrilege?
Your post poetically demands repatriating ancient Egyptian grave goods ("belongings of the Angels") to their tombs, tied to Howard Carter’s 1922 discovery of Tutankhamun’s near-intact tomb (KV62) with its ~5,000 artifacts.
"Angels" likely evokes the divine pharaohs; "soldiers will sing a song" adds a dramatic rallying tone (echoing resolve-in-conflict motifs).
Fact: Most Tutankhamun treasures stayed in Egypt per excavation terms and are now in the Grand Egyptian Museum/Cairo. Egypt has repatriated many artifacts via diplomacy over decades. Broader heritage debates weigh preservation, access, and origins.
What specific claim or angle should I dig into?