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Museum returns Aboriginal remains | Museum returns Aboriginal remains |
(about 6 hours later) | |
Members of an Aboriginal tribe held a ritual in front of Liverpool's World Museum to mark the repatriation of human remains to Australia. | |
A skull is being returned to representatives of the Ngarrindjeri people because it has strong spiritual and religious significance. | A skull is being returned to representatives of the Ngarrindjeri people because it has strong spiritual and religious significance. |
The remains were purchased from Dr William Broad, of Liverpool, in 1948. | The remains were purchased from Dr William Broad, of Liverpool, in 1948. |
He visited Australia between 1902 and 1904 and published works on Australian skeletal remains. | He visited Australia between 1902 and 1904 and published works on Australian skeletal remains. |
The event, which followed a private commemoration, involved rituals including a smoking ceremony using smouldering eucalyptus leaves in a bowl. | |
The remains entered our collections many years ago and it is fitting that they are being returned to their homeland Dr David Fleming, director of National Museums Liverpool | |
The Ngarrindjeri (meaning The People) is a group of 18 clans or lakinyeri who speak similar dialects and have family connections around the lower Murray River, western Fleurieu Peninsula and Coorong, South Australia. | The Ngarrindjeri (meaning The People) is a group of 18 clans or lakinyeri who speak similar dialects and have family connections around the lower Murray River, western Fleurieu Peninsula and Coorong, South Australia. |
In January 2006, National Museums Liverpool received a request for the return of all Australian human remains in its possession. | In January 2006, National Museums Liverpool received a request for the return of all Australian human remains in its possession. |
This is the first of the remains of three individuals being returned to Australia. Dates for the return for the other two have yet to be fixed. | This is the first of the remains of three individuals being returned to Australia. Dates for the return for the other two have yet to be fixed. |
They will be returned following consultations with the Australian indigenous communities from the areas where they originated. | They will be returned following consultations with the Australian indigenous communities from the areas where they originated. |
The remains will be kept at National Museum of Australia in Canberra | |
Some of the remains were collected from Darnley Island in the Torres Strait between Australia and New Guinea by explorers on the voyage of the Rattlesnake in 1849. | |
National Museums Liverpool acquired them from the Norwich Castle Museum in 1956. The other remains are believed to have originated in north Queensland. | |
They were given to National Museums Liverpool by the Wellcome Historical Medical Museum, London, in 1981. This museum had owned them since 1933. | |
None of the remains have been on public display, nor have they been used for research or educational purposes. | None of the remains have been on public display, nor have they been used for research or educational purposes. |
The remains will be kept in a keeping place at the National Museum of Australia, Canberra. | The remains will be kept in a keeping place at the National Museum of Australia, Canberra. |
'Sensitive issue' | 'Sensitive issue' |
Dr David Fleming, director of National Museums Liverpool, said: "The remains entered our collections many years ago and it is fitting that they are being returned to their homeland. | Dr David Fleming, director of National Museums Liverpool, said: "The remains entered our collections many years ago and it is fitting that they are being returned to their homeland. |
"The repatriation of cultural items to their countries of origin is a complex, emotive and sensitive issue. National Museums Liverpool takes a decision in each individual case when items are requested for repatriation." | "The repatriation of cultural items to their countries of origin is a complex, emotive and sensitive issue. National Museums Liverpool takes a decision in each individual case when items are requested for repatriation." |
An Aboriginal skull of a 19th Century warrior called Yagan was handed back by Liverpool City Museum in 1997 after it had been buried in Everton Cemetery. | An Aboriginal skull of a 19th Century warrior called Yagan was handed back by Liverpool City Museum in 1997 after it had been buried in Everton Cemetery. |
It sparked a wave of controversy on its return to Australia when community leaders could not decide where to bury it and others saying it should never have been brought back. | It sparked a wave of controversy on its return to Australia when community leaders could not decide where to bury it and others saying it should never have been brought back. |
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