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NisgaB次元官网网址檃 pole return marks global landmark in reconciliation reckoning

Return to B.C. from Scottish museum could mark new chapter in post-colonial relationships
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The Nisg瘫aB次元官网网址檃 NationB次元官网网址檚 flag is laid across the exterior of the custom-built crate that houses the House of NiB次元官网网址檌sjoohl Memorial Pole onto a plane in the United Kingdom on Sept. 14. (Master Corporal Nicolas Alonso, Canadian Armed Forces, via House of NiB次元官网网址檌sjoohl/Nisg瘫aB次元官网网址檃 Lisims Government)

A homecoming celebration for a memorial totem pole after an absence of almost 100 years will resonate far beyond the tiny Indigenous village in northwest British Columbia where it is being returned Friday.

The House of NiB次元官网网址檌sjoohl memorial totem, on display in the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh since 1930, returns amid a reckoning for some cultural institutions about colonial legacies.

But Indigenous, political, cultural and institutional leaders say the meaning of the totemB次元官网网址檚 journey to its ancestral NisgaB次元官网网址檃 Nation village home in the remote Nass Valley transcends the return of stolen artwork B次元官网网址 it is an act of reconciliation that can open other doors.

John Giblin, keeper of global arts, cultures and design at the National Museum of Scotland, said in an interview from Hamburg, Germany, that the Edinburgh institution is committed to B次元官网网址渆ngaging with the colonial history and the colonial legacies of our collections and our practices.B次元官网网址

Public support in Scotland for the poleB次元官网网址檚 return to the Nass Valley was positive, said Giblin, adding the experience has developed into a fuller relationship between the NisgaB次元官网网址檃 and the museum and future collaborations are now being considered.

Hundreds of people are expected to attend the ceremony welcoming the 11-metre pole back to the Nass Valley, about 1,400 kilometres northwest of Vancouver, after a journey that included a flight aboard a Canadian Armed Forces aircraft.

The timing also carries significance. It arrives one day before CanadaB次元官网网址檚 National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, held to honour survivors of residential schools and Indigenous children who did not come home.

B次元官网网址淢useums need to understand this as something that is not about loss or it does not have to be about loss,B次元官网网址 Giblin said of the poleB次元官网网址檚 return.

B次元官网网址淚f done well and if done in collaboration with communities, it can be about generating new understanding, new relationships.B次元官网网址

Giblin, who was in Hamburg for a meeting of the European Ethnography Museum directorsB次元官网网址 group, said he provided members with an update about the return of the NisgaB次元官网网址檃 totem.

GiblinB次元官网网址檚 attitude contrasts with a mindset that once prevailed among some in the global museum community, that B次元官网网址渦niversal museumsB次元官网网址 held artifacts in multicultural collections for the betterment of humanity as a whole.

In a 2002 document called the B次元官网网址淒eclaration on the Importance and Value of Universal Museums,B次元官网网址 some of the worldB次元官网网址檚 most renowned museums and galleries said that museums B次元官网网址減rovide a valid and valuable context for objects that were long ago displaced from their original source.B次元官网网址

It pushed back against calls for repatriation by saying that B次元官网网址渕useums serve not just the citizens of one nation but the people of every nation.B次元官网网址

B次元官网网址淭o narrow the focus of museums whose collections are diverse and multi-faceted would therefore be a disservice to all visitors,B次元官网网址 it said.

The declarationB次元官网网址檚 18 signatories included the Louvre in Paris, New YorkB次元官网网址檚 Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Prado Museum in Madrid.

But museums globally are increasingly facing pressure to return items to their rightful owners.

The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which also signed the 2002 declaration, is now among those looking to return artworks. It has placed a plaque on a display of rare West African works of art, including bronze helmets and swords, saying it was aware the objects were looted by British troops in 1897.

New York City passed a law in August 2022 requiring museums to acknowledge works of art as stolen from Jews by the Nazis.

The reputation of museums as places of safekeeping has also been eroded.

Last month, the director of the British Museum announced his resignation after investigations revealed the theft or disappearance of hundreds of items. Hartwig Fischer apologized for failing to take seriously enough a warning from an art historian that artifacts from its collection were being sold on eBay.

B次元官网网址淢useums as an idea where they centrally locate objects from around the world for people to view and learn about is in one way a great learning project, but in another way it also represents many of the challenges we see with the experience of colonization and the negative impacts it had on peoplesB次元官网网址 cultures,B次元官网网址 said Prof. Geoffrey Bird, of the school of communication and culture at VictoriaB次元官网网址檚 Royal Roads University.

The return of the memorial totem helps the NisgaB次元官网网址檃 re-establish their link with their past after the residential school experience where Canadian governments and the church sought to remove peopleB次元官网网址檚 Indigenous identity, he said.

The totemB次元官网网址檚 return provides the opportunity to take reconciliation to a higher level beyond repatriating a work of art, that could lead to improvements in education, infrastructure and technology, said Bird.

B次元官网网址淚 also think it is a gateway to opening the doors to addressing all these other needs in the community,B次元官网网址 he said. B次元官网网址淚tB次元官网网址檚 an important step toward generating awareness. These kinds of efforts have spinoff benefits.B次元官网网址

The NisgaB次元官网网址檃 Nation and National Museums Scotland are calling the return of the pole a B次元官网网址渞ematriation,B次元官网网址 reflecting the matrilineal nature of NisgaB次元官网网址檃 society.

The red cedar pole was taken without the nationB次元官网网址檚 consent in 1929 by an ethnographer researching NisgaB次元官网网址檃 village life, who then sold it to the Scottish museum.

A NisgaB次元官网网址檃 delegation travelled to Scotland to ask for its return in August 2022, and the museumB次元官网网址檚 board of trustees approved the plan. Amy Parent, a member of the nation and Canada Research Chair in Indigenous education and governance said last month that a previous request for the poleB次元官网网址檚 return two decades ago had been rebuffed on the grounds that the pole was too old to move.

NisgaB次元官网网址檃 Nation President Eva Clayton said the return of the memorial pole helps set the tone for reconciliation efforts by other Indigenous nations.

The NisgaB次元官网网址檃 have a history of leadership, being the first Indigenous nation to sign a modern-day treaty in B.C. in the late 1990s, and ongoing efforts to pursue reconciliation, she said.

B次元官网网址淚t is through the combination of traditional knowledge and western education that has led our nation yet again to the forefront,B次元官网网址 said Clayton.

B次元官网网址淭his is where we sit as a nation, watching all other nations, whether it be European, North American debating the costs of historical wrongs.B次元官网网址

The return of the memorial totem could act as a catalyst that will spread worldwide as more countries, governments and institutions face requests by Indigenous people to have their artifacts returned, said Murray Rankin, B.C.B次元官网网址檚 Indigenous relations and reconciliation minister.

B次元官网网址淲hat more poignant example of that than to have after almost 100 years in the Scottish museum, the national museum, such a critically important piece of NisgaB次元官网网址檃 history returned to the NisgaB次元官网网址檃,B次元官网网址 he said.

B次元官网网址淭o me, itB次元官网网址檚 a wonderful example of the kind of changes that are afoot, long overdue changes in the direction of reconciliation.B次元官网网址

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