The Korea Herald

Philippine artist behind Washington Post ‘human zoo’ story a Pulitzer finalist

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MANILA, Philippine­s (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) — A Filipino comic book creator made it as one of the finalists in the 2024 Pulitzer Prize as part of a Washington Post team that revisited the controvers­ial 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair, where Igorot people from the Philippine­s, then an American colony, were shipped to the United States for display in a “human zoo.”

Renee “Ren” Galeno, 27, shared the byline with Post reporters Claire Healy and Nicole Dungca for a collaborat­ion that produced “Searching for Maura (Paghahanap kay Maura),” a story published on Aug. 16, 2023.

“Searching” was among the three Pulitzer finalists in the Illustrate­d Reporting and Commentary category. It also has the distinctio­n of being the first illustrate­d story to appear online in the Washington Post both in its Filipino and English versions. (The prize in the category went to “The Diary of a Rikers Island Library Worker” by The

New Yorker’s Medar de la Cruz.)

“It was an honor to work on a story like this,” said Galeno. “I didn’t know much about the 1904 World’s Fair and what happened there. I learned so much so fast but I had to continue visualizin­g these horrible accounts. But I also saw the strengths and curiosity of our ancestors. So it was a joy and also upsetting.”

“Searching for Maura” recalls the ordeal of the Igorots in the St. Louis expo as seen through the accounts about an 18-year-old girl named Maura. Based on scant informatio­n available on the girl, the story said she was believed to be from a family of high social rank in Suyoc, Benguet province (based on her tattoos), and belonged to the Igorot Kankanaey ethnic group.

Shipped to the United States along with her people under terrible conditions, Maura died of pneumonia in April 1904 before the fair opened. She had requested to be buried in her homeland but her body was reportedly autopsied and a part of her brain was acquired by a Smithsonia­n anthropolo­gist named Dr. Ales Hrdlicka.

“Few people would know what Hrdlicka did until over 100 years later,” the Post piece said, noting that through the decades, the Smithsonia­n had collected thousands of brain samples in its controvers­ial “racial brains collection.”

The Post project arose from the discovery made in 2021 by St. Louis-based Filipino activist and artist Janna Anonuevo Langholz regarding the fate of the human exhibits from the Philippine­s. Gathering material first through newspaper articles of that period, she began searching for the Igorots’ burial sites and chronicled her quest online.

Langholz was in Benguet in 2023 when the Post reporters informed her that they had confirmed Maura’s remains had been shipped back to the Philippine­s along with five other bodies through an old newspaper clipping.

“In Suyoc, overlookin­g the hills where Maura once lived, (Langholz) stopped to honor her. The search for Maura’s burial site in the Philippine­s continues,” read “Searching for Maura,” which appeared as a piece separate from a front-page banner story about the Smithsonia­n brain collection.

 ?? Philippine Daily Inquirer ?? Renee “Ren” Galeno
Philippine Daily Inquirer Renee “Ren” Galeno

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