The Asian Age

Culture war over S. African golden rhino figurine

Since the end of racist rule in 1994, the stunning gold figurine of a rhino — just 15 centimetre­s long and more than 700 years old — has become a defining symbol of pre- colonial civilisati­on in South Africa

- Stephanie Findlay

or not the South African government will sign off on the loan.

“I think because South Africa has this colonial legacy, people are concerned about heritage objects leaving the country,” said Sian Tiley- Nel, manager of the University of Pretoria museums.

“But these are just temporary showcases, they will come back,” she said.

After centuries of political, commercial and military exploitati­on, history in Africa — and who gets to tell it — is a hotly contested subject.

European museums, with their vast collection­s of colonial artefacts ranging from Benin bronzes to Ugandan headdresse­s made of human hair, have a controvers­ial track record on the continent.

In August, Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe lashed out at Britain’s National History Museum for failing to turn over the skulls of African freedom fighters.

“Surely, keeping decapitate­d heads as war trophies, in this day and age, in a national history museum, must rank among the highest forms of racist moral decadence, sadism and human insensitiv­ity,” Mugabe said.

To date,

the

South African government has declined to say whether the golden rhino, will feature as a star exhibit at the London show.

“This matter is still under negotiatio­n and has not been finalised as yet,” South Africa’s Department of Arts and Culture said.

In 1932, a group of white men hunting for treasure discovered the rhino in Mapungubwe hill, a rocky outcrop in the country’s northern Limpopo province, where baobab trees tower over herds of elephant.

They had stumbled across the remains of a graveyard for the elites of a lost kingdom that was a trading hub in 1220, exchanging ivory and gold for glass beads and cloth with Egypt, India and China.

A former student at the University of Pretoria turned over some of the cache to the school.

Despite its obvious significan­ce, the golden rhino was ignored by the colonial — and, later, apartheid — government­s, whose regimes were premised on the belief that Africans were primitive.

The rhino and other gold artefacts, including a leopard figurine and necklaces, challenged the colonial version of history that South African civilisati­on started when Dutch colonial administra­tor Jan van Riebeeck landed in 1652.

“Mapungubwe has come to show that South Africa has a very rich history,” said Tiley- Nel, speaking in the dimly lit gallery where the golden rhino is on display.

“The southern part of Africa was not an empty myth land.”

Since Nelson Mandela was elected the country’s first democratic President in 1994, Mapungubwe has been declared a Unesco World Heritage Site.

The Order of Mapungubwe is South Africa’s highest honour ( Mandela was the first recipient in 2002).

However, controvers­y surrounds the figurine, with a long- running custody battle in South Africa highlighti­ng the country’s struggle to recast its history more than 20 years after the fall of apartheid.

A special centre was built at Mapungubwe to house the rhino, which weighs just 42.8 grams, but it doesn’t meet the profession­al museum requiremen­ts needed to protect the figurine.

As a result, custody of the rhino has remained with the University of Pretoria — a location that angers many.

“We can’t just keep on relying on the old institutio­ns which acquired these artefacts under dubious means,” said Ciraj Rassool, history professor at the University of the Western Cape.

“It’s a tragedy there was a failure to create a suitable museum,” he said. “The golden rhino is left in limbo.” Still, Rassool hopes that before the rhino heads home to Mapungubwe, it first goes on tour to London to be shown to the world.

“It is important that these aspects of South African culture be known about in as many countries as possible,” he said.

 ?? — AFP ?? The “golden rhino” figurine is displayed at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. The Mapungubwe Golden Rhino is believed to have been made by people living in the northern region of South Africa between 1220 and 1290 AD.
— AFP The “golden rhino” figurine is displayed at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. The Mapungubwe Golden Rhino is believed to have been made by people living in the northern region of South Africa between 1220 and 1290 AD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India