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    Australia Calls for German Museums to Give Back Human Bones

    Aboriginal protest outside British Natural History museum 2007
    Aboriginal protest outside British Natural History museum 2007
    photo courtesy Kevin Brown

    By Kate Hairsine

    1 April 2007 - It might have been a British colony, but that didn't stop Germans in the 19th and 20th centuries from collecting human remains in Australia.

    Now, the Australian government is demanding the return of indigenous bones. "We have approached the German authorities and are seeking to establish a legal framework for the return of remains," said Günter Schlothauer, the Australian embassy's spokesman in Berlin.

    Schlothauer said that negotiations between the two countries are at an early stage. The Australian government hasn't been in contact with individual museums or institutions, he added.

    Spurred on by the publication of Darwin's "On the Origin of Species" and the "Descent of Man," the great epoch of German collecting in Australia was between the 1860s and the 1900s.

    "As Darwin himself said, it was Germany he saw as holding out the great hope for the acceptance of his theories," said Professor Paul Turnbull, an Australian academic who specializes in the theft of indigenous cultural property.

    Plundering collectors

    Alongside plant and animal specimens, naturalists and scientists also collected Aboriginal bones. According to Turnbull, many of these came from jails and hospitals, but collectors also robbed recent graves and burial sites.

    "There are many recorded examples of Aborigines fearing to die or actively protecting burial places because they feared Europeans would exhume them for skeletal remains," Turnbull said.

    Sometimes collectors went to greater lengths to acquire specimens. It's rumored the famous German naturalist, Amalie Dietrich, even asked settlers for Aborigines to be shot.

    Number of remains unknown

    There are no exact figures on how many Aboriginal skeletal remains are languishing in German museums. Some collections went missing during World War II, and in other cases, institutes lack the cash to fully document their holdings.

    Then there are museums, such as Germany's biggest anthropological museum, the Ethnology Museum in Berlin, which refuse to comment on the origins or extent of their bone collections.

    Amalie Dietrich's extensive collection -- then held in Leipzig's Museum of Ethnology -- was destroyed in World War II. But the museum's curator for the Australian and Oceanic collection, Brigit Schaps, believes institutions need to deal openly with these questions.

    "We should cooperate -- we should discuss quite openly how to deal with material like that," Schaps said.
    This view isn't shared by everyone in the museum world. There are many who argue that as new technologies evolve, new information about humanity may well be uncovered using Aboriginal remains.

    Number of remains unknown

    There are no exact figures on how many Aboriginal skeletal remains are languishing in German museums. Some collections went missing during World War II, and in other cases, institutes lack the cash to fully document their holdings.

    Then there are museums, such as Germany's biggest anthropological museum, the Ethnology Museum in Berlin, which refuse to comment on the origins or extent of their bone collections.

    Amalie Dietrich's extensive collection -- then held in Leipzig's Museum of Ethnology -- was destroyed in World War II. But the museum's curator for the Australian and Oceanic collection, Brigit Schaps, believes institutions need to deal openly with these questions.

    "We should cooperate -- we should discuss quite openly how to deal with material like that," Schaps said.
    This view isn't shared by everyone in the museum world. There are many who argue that as new technologies evolve, new information about humanity may well be uncovered using Aboriginal remains.

    Scandals, such as the unauthorized harvesting of hearts and organs from deceased children at Liverpool's Alder Hey Children's Hospital that came to light in 1999, helped turn the tide of opinion in favor of repatriation, Turnbull added.

    That started to make a lot of people think, "well, if it is good enough for us, why are indigenous Australians denied this fundamental human right," he said.

    "We are not animals"

    During the past few years, the Kimberly Aboriginal Land and Culture Center (KALACC) in northwest Australia has been responsible for the ceremonial reburial of human remains repatriated from Sweden as well as other regions of Australia.

    "If you take the spirits away from their land that makes the country sick, and when the old ones are returned, their spirits are very happy to be back," said Joe Brown, KALACC's chairman.

    But Brown added that it's not just important to lay the spirits to rest; it's also about respect.

    "We are not animals -- we are humans like white people. Every human has a spiritual life and you have to respect this," he said.

    Source: Deutsche Welle


    Further information: repatriation issues page - includes news index and external links


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