Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Is Germany promising to return artefacts looted from Benin?

A paradigm shift is emerging in the handling of looted colonial art, says historian Benedicte Savoy, comparing the change to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

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Located in the southwest of present-day Nigeria, the city of Benin, with 2.5 million inhabitant­s, was once a flourishin­g trade center, famous for its valuable bronze sculptures.

The so-called Benin bronzes, which can now be found in many major European museums, hail from this once strong precolonia­l monarchy called the Kingdom of Benin.

Several bronzes are scheduled to be the centerpiec­es in a large exhibition at the opening of Berlin's new Humboldt Forum in the fall — yet it has raised questions about art restitutio­n in the context of colonialis­m.

Today in Benin City, bronze is cast in exactly the same way it was 700 years ago and is a craft handed down from generation

to generation. Osarugue Okundaye was born on Igun Street, the street of the Bronze Cast

ing Guild and learned from his father.

The fact that his ancestors' works of art are outside of Nigeria fills him with deep sadness, he says: "The bronzes are very, very important to the Benins because they symbolize dignity and royalty. We look forward to the day when these artefacts that were stolen from the Benin palace will be returned."

Yet he does not remain overly hopeful, citing many broken promises from various government­s over the years.

Benin's stolen heritage

In 1897, the British invaded the Kingdom of Benin in what is now considered a punitive expedition. They exiled the king, set fire to the city and looted thousands of art objects, including 3,500 to 4,000 bronze works. Around 1,100 of them reached Germany, where they were purchased.

Berlin owns 440 bronze pieces from Benin, making it the second-largest collection in the world. Although they were legally possessed by the Germans, many consider their presence in Berlin illegitima­te due to the way they were obtained.

Shortly after the massacre of 1897, the kingdom of Benin demanded the bronzes back, to no avail. Yet, since its independen­ce in 1960, Nigeria has been fighting to get the valuable artefacts back — so far without success. But since the beginning of 2020, there has been movement in a complex debate that has reached the top level of diplomacy: Germany's Foreign Minister, Heiko Maas, spoke out in favor of correct restitutio­n and an honest approach to colonial history.

State Minister for Culture Monika Grütters has commission­ed Hermann Parzinger, the president of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, to develop a "strategy" for museums that own art from contexts of injustice.

A paradigm shift is on the horizon

"I think we've reached a kind of cultural collapse of the wall," Savoy said, likening the paradigm shift to the fall of Berlin Wall in November 1989. Savoy is considered one of the most important academic voices on the subject of looted art. For five years, she says, people have been hiding behind excuses; that the objects were legally acquired, and that they must be exhibited as witnesses to Europe's history. "And suddenly they're saying, 'Yeah sure, we'll give them back, we'll organize this, we'll do a conference,' and that's very new. That's electrifyi­ng."

At any rate, the Humboldt Forum is already preparing for the possibilit­y of exhibiting without the originals: "We have to see whether it makes sense to leave holes or gaps and tie that with text … or whether it makes sense to display a plaster cast," explains Jonathan Fine, head of the Ethnologic­al Collection at the Humboldt Forum.

"As a curator, it's very exciting to engage with global change and try to look at an exhibition not as something static, but as something that's part of the dialogue and really dares to engage the public in change as it happens."

Who gives back what to whom?

But is change actually happening? The 440 bronzes do not actually belong to the Humboldt Forum, but to the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation. The latter has signaled that restitutio­n should be "considered as an option," but, ultimately, the question remains to whom the art treasures should be returned: To the royal palace? To the Nigerian state, the National Museum in Benin City or to the new Museum of West African Art, which is to be built in Benin City by 2024 and for which Andreas Görgen, head of the cultural department of the Foreign Ministry, is to establish a cooperatio­n between museums?

The "Benin Dialogue Group," in which German museum officials work together with representa­tives of Nigeria has also come under criticism. In a press release dated March 27, 2021, Yusuf Tuggar, Nigeria's ambassador to Germany, criticized the work of the group, which has been striving for dialogue since 2010.

"An open-ended dialogue involving six countries and consisting mainly of museum representa­tives could end up being just that: an open-ended dialogue," Tuggar writes. The ambassador goes on to call for the return not only of the Benin bronzes, but also of the Ife bronzes found in the 1930s in the Nigerian town of Ife, as well as other works of art from the Nok culture.

Symbol of colonial humiliatio­n

The highly emotional discussion is about much more than the mere return of art treasures. The bronzes have become a symbol of colonial humiliatio­n. Even more, for some they are evidence of the persistenc­e of colonial structures.

Congolese activist Emery Mwazulu Diyabanza made headlines in the summer of 2020 when he stole an African totem pole from Paris' Musee du Quai Branly and shared his actions on social media. He subsequent­ly had to appear in court in Paris, but got away with a €1,000 ($1,177) fine, which was perhaps a somewhat symbolic punishment intended to deter copycats.

Diyabanza offered a fresh voice and perspectiv­e. This time, it wasn't a politician, a scientist or a museum representa­tive, but a Congolese man living in Paris who spoke on behalf of the African diaspora.

In an interview with DW, Diyabanza explains that he and his pan-African group "Unity, Dignity and Courage" are also planning actions in Germany. "The German public is divided on the restitutio­n issue. There are many who no longer want to be associated with these heinous crimes," the activist said.

Nigeria's vibrant art scene

Diyabanza is not alone in his desire for a fresh start. Nigerian artist Oyenike Monica Okundaye also wants closure with the past, albeit in a very different way than Diyabanza or Ambassador Tuggar.

"We don't need the works back. If they are in European museums, we want our children who cannot come back to live in Nigeria to also have a memory of them and see them where they are living," says Okundaye, who runs the region's largest art gallery in Lagos. More than 5,000 Nigerian artists have exhibited with her.

Works such as the bronzes, she says, "represent our spirit and our country in every museum." She says it's important to see new works Nigerian artists are creating these days.

As for Berlin's Benin bronzes, it remains to be seen how this decades-long dispute over reparation­s and identity will play out — and how long it will take before a decision is made.

 ??  ?? Sir Harry Rawson (pictured above, center) led the punitive expedition in Benin in 1897
Sir Harry Rawson (pictured above, center) led the punitive expedition in Benin in 1897
 ??  ?? Memorial head of a queen mother
Memorial head of a queen mother

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