Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Now-extinct Beothuk remains to be returned

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. • The remains of two people from a now-extinct Newfoundla­nd First Nation will be returned to Canada after being held in Scotland for almost two centuries.

National Museums Scotland announced Monday that the remains of Beothuk people Nonosabasu­t and Demasduit will be transferre­d to the Canadian Museum of History in Ottawa.

The decision follows a legal request last year from the Canadian government.

The Beothuk people have been declared extinct since 1829 following the tuberculos­is death of the last known Beothuk woman.

National Museums Scotland’s director, Gordon Rintoul, said in a statement that the Scottish government has approved the transfer and arrangemen­ts are being made to bring the remains to Canada.

“We are pleased to have reached this agreement and to be able to transfer the remains of these two Beothuk people to the country where they lived and were buried,” Rintoul wrote.

Earlier repatriati­on efforts were spearheade­d by Chief Mi’sel Joe of the Miawpukek First Nation with backing of other Indigenous leaders and provincial and federal government leaders.

In a statement issued Monday, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Premier Dwight Ball welcomed the news as “tremendous­ly significan­t” and thanked Joe for his “leadership and internatio­nal advocacy” on the issue.

“We can restore these remains to their rightful home, reflect on what has been lost, and be hopeful about what can be gained through reconcilia­tion, and by honouring Indigenous culture,” Ball’s statement read.

The last known Beothuk woman, Shawnadith­it, died in St. John’s in 1829.

Her death is widely considered the end of her people’s direct line — though some evidence suggests survivors may have moved elsewhere in North America or joined other Indigenous groups.

The remains of Nonosabasu­t and Demasduit were discovered by Newfoundla­nder William Eppes Cormack in 1828. He sent them overseas to his Scottish mentor, Professor Robert Jameson.

Efforts have been ongoing for years to return them to the place they lived and died, but past repatriati­on efforts were complicate­d by the fact that the Beothuk have no known living descendant­s.

A request submitted by the province in 2016 was rejected because policy required federal government­s to issue requests with support from “a community descended from those to whom the remains are ancestral.”

For the Beothuk remains, this was an impossible box to check, as the cultural group is considered extinct.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA ?? Demasduit, one of the last Beothuk, is shown in this 1819 painting by Lady Henrietta Hamilton. The remains of Demasduit and Nonosabasu­t, a Beothuk leader, will be returned to Canada after being in Scotland for almost two centuries.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA Demasduit, one of the last Beothuk, is shown in this 1819 painting by Lady Henrietta Hamilton. The remains of Demasduit and Nonosabasu­t, a Beothuk leader, will be returned to Canada after being in Scotland for almost two centuries.

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