From the Elgin Marbles to NAGPRA: What is repatriation?
From the Elgin Marbles to NAGPRA: What is repatriation?
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Transcript
VO: A top-floor gallery in the Acropolis Museum sits empty. It is intended to house the Elgin Marbles, a collection of ancient Greek sculptures originally crafted for the Parthenon.
The problem? These sculptures no longer “belong” to Greece.
In the 19th century an ambassador to the Ottoman Empire shipped the marbles home to Great Britain—where, after hundreds of years and multiple demands from Greece for the statues’ return—they still remain.
The Elgin Marbles are just one example of a request for repatriation. Around the world, there are hundreds of thousands more that don’t get attention.
June Carpenter: So repatriation is the act or process of returning human remains and cultural items to Native American tribes, other communities, sometimes other entities like perhaps a nation-state. There's kind of two aspects to repatriation, so both the legal transfer of “ownership” and the physical return of the human remains or cultural items.
Adéwolé Faladé: Multiple reasons underlie repatriation claims. Some of them involve一the owners or the heirs wish to have their stolen belongings back, as the artifacts are part of their heritage. And in certain cases the plundered items have remained important for the practice of ceremonies and the continuity of cultural life of the social cultural groups. And the sacred aspect of these objects cannot be replaced or transferred to new objects.
VO: Repatriation is often connected to colonization. Historically, powerful nations appropriated materials from colonized societies in the name of art, education, or preservation. Many of these materials ended up studied by academics or displayed in museums.
Tolerance for this practice has been waning for decades.
In the United States, some museums and other institutions are required by NAGPRA to return Indigenous human remains and other cultural objects to their tribes of origin.
Other repatriation laws around the world focus on relationships between specific countries or continents—but some countries have laws blocking some repatriation efforts entirely.
When institutions take repatriation claims seriously, their policies have to change.
June Carpenter: We have taken many items off display or covered them because those items shouldn't be on display. And we've returned many items because those items shouldn't be in museums. And under the new regulations, the duty of care is established, which requires free, prior, and informed consent for the display, access, research, on human remains and cultural items.
So any display or study of NAGPRA-eligible items will require permission from the affiliated tribes. And generally, too, even if they're non-NAGPRA items, we do try to consult with tribes for that, for that permission and guidance.
VO: Of course, repatriation is about more than taking stolen materials off display. It’s about reconnecting people with their history and acknowledging that their history belongs to them.
June Carpenter: I think, you know, respecting tribal sovereignty, honoring tribal sovereignty, is really important. And that that's really the only way for museums to move forward.
As a Native person, I do feel that I have a responsibility to honor and represent Native people, my people, my culture, with my cultural, legal, and museum background.
Adéwolé Faladé: In certain cases, many generations have been cut off from the linking elements of their past, the history of their forebears and descripting of their identity. So they need the repatriation of their cultural goods, the repatriation of that missing link, to reconnect with their identity and ground themselves.
Repatriation gives a voice back to those who have been muted for such a long time and are now being able to rewrite their own stories and not serve a discriminatory discourse anymore.
The problem? These sculptures no longer “belong” to Greece.
In the 19th century an ambassador to the Ottoman Empire shipped the marbles home to Great Britain—where, after hundreds of years and multiple demands from Greece for the statues’ return—they still remain.
The Elgin Marbles are just one example of a request for repatriation. Around the world, there are hundreds of thousands more that don’t get attention.
June Carpenter: So repatriation is the act or process of returning human remains and cultural items to Native American tribes, other communities, sometimes other entities like perhaps a nation-state. There's kind of two aspects to repatriation, so both the legal transfer of “ownership” and the physical return of the human remains or cultural items.
Adéwolé Faladé: Multiple reasons underlie repatriation claims. Some of them involve一the owners or the heirs wish to have their stolen belongings back, as the artifacts are part of their heritage. And in certain cases the plundered items have remained important for the practice of ceremonies and the continuity of cultural life of the social cultural groups. And the sacred aspect of these objects cannot be replaced or transferred to new objects.
VO: Repatriation is often connected to colonization. Historically, powerful nations appropriated materials from colonized societies in the name of art, education, or preservation. Many of these materials ended up studied by academics or displayed in museums.
Tolerance for this practice has been waning for decades.
In the United States, some museums and other institutions are required by NAGPRA to return Indigenous human remains and other cultural objects to their tribes of origin.
Other repatriation laws around the world focus on relationships between specific countries or continents—but some countries have laws blocking some repatriation efforts entirely.
When institutions take repatriation claims seriously, their policies have to change.
June Carpenter: We have taken many items off display or covered them because those items shouldn't be on display. And we've returned many items because those items shouldn't be in museums. And under the new regulations, the duty of care is established, which requires free, prior, and informed consent for the display, access, research, on human remains and cultural items.
So any display or study of NAGPRA-eligible items will require permission from the affiliated tribes. And generally, too, even if they're non-NAGPRA items, we do try to consult with tribes for that, for that permission and guidance.
VO: Of course, repatriation is about more than taking stolen materials off display. It’s about reconnecting people with their history and acknowledging that their history belongs to them.
June Carpenter: I think, you know, respecting tribal sovereignty, honoring tribal sovereignty, is really important. And that that's really the only way for museums to move forward.
As a Native person, I do feel that I have a responsibility to honor and represent Native people, my people, my culture, with my cultural, legal, and museum background.
Adéwolé Faladé: In certain cases, many generations have been cut off from the linking elements of their past, the history of their forebears and descripting of their identity. So they need the repatriation of their cultural goods, the repatriation of that missing link, to reconnect with their identity and ground themselves.
Repatriation gives a voice back to those who have been muted for such a long time and are now being able to rewrite their own stories and not serve a discriminatory discourse anymore.