Bamiyan Buddha is a huge Buddha image returned to the cliff of the Bamwam Valley in Afghanistan in the 6th century. The Taliban destroyed these statues in 2001. While Afghanistan was experiencing the famine, their destruction was found to be a way of protesting international aid, especially for maintaining statues. Japan and many other countries who promised to support the reconstruction of statues condemned this behavior.
Many workers worked hard to make a huge Buddha statue on countless months and years at the edge of the Bamiyan Valley in the Hazarajat region in central Afghanistan in 507 AD. The second largest Buddha statue was engraved in about AD 534 AD. During the next 467 years, Bamiyan Buddha statue was a symbol of the wonderful beauty of humanity and the humble belief of all who saw them. Since then, members of Islamic countries have added some of the destruction of human race 's oldest remains in their brutal carnival. The ancient city Palmyra is located in Syria, which was devastated by war, became a trading place of Rome in about 200 AD. Muslim national extremists grabbed it in May and destroyed several historic buildings
For nearly 15 years, the ruins of Bamiyan Buddha were in danger. Finally, in February of this year, in order to restore the heritage of Bamiyan, UNESCO unveiled the design and image location of the Bamiyan Valley cultural center; the project is expected to take two years to complete. The building will be both a community center and a cultural showcase. The architect was inspired by an ancient monastery in Bamiyan, designed a building sinking in the hillside, focused on the empty Buddha cave, and created a cool negative space imitating the ancient monastery in Bamiyan.