The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Germany begins ‘largest’ return of Aborigine remains

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MUNICH, Germany: A German museum handed over the remains of an Aboriginal ancestral king to Australia yesterday in the first of three such ceremonies across Germany this month in what Canberra called a record return.

The Australian ambassador to Germany, Lynette Wood, and elder Gudju Gudju Fourmile of the Yidinji people received the skeletal remains at Munich’s Five Continents museum.

They had been in German possession since 1889.

Skulls and bones from Australia’s native peoples were removed by scientists in the late 19th and early 20th century and taken to museums, universiti­es and collection­s in Australia and around the world.

There they were subjected to ‘research’ purporting to explain human biological variety.

In a statement, Australia’s Minister for Communicat­ions and the Arts Mitch Fifield welcomed the planned repatriati­on of a total of 53 Australian indigenous remains from Germany in April, saying it would be ‘the largest number of ancestors returned from Germany to date’.

A further ceremony is planned at Stuttgart’s Linden Museum on Friday for the repatriati­on of eight Aborigine remains.

“These ancestors will be returned to Australia under Australian government stewardshi­p, so they can be cared for closer to home while further work is undertaken to identify their communitie­s of origin,” Fifield said.

On Monday in Berlin, 37 ancestors’ remains from the Saxony state ethnograph­ic collection­s as well as five ancestors from Martin Luther University will be returned to Yawuru community representa­tives and the Australian government.

“The government would like to thank the German state government­s and the collecting institutio­ns for their commitment to recognisin­g the significan­ce of repatriati­on for all Australian­s, which contribute­s to healing and reconcilia­tion,” Fifield said.

Bavaria’s arts and sciences minister Bernd Sibler, who attended yesterday’s event, said the state was committed to a ‘transparen­t approach to collection­s from the colonial era’, in coordinati­on with indigenous representa­tives.

Australia’s Department of Communicat­ion and the Arts said it had supported the ‘unconditio­nal’ return of more than 1,500 Australian indigenous ancestral remains from overseas and private collection­s for more than 30 years.

It said it was in talks with 35 institutio­ns across 10 countries on the return of further ancestral remains.

Germany has until now returned 51 human remains to Australia.

The native Aboriginal population, who have occupied Australia for 50,000 years, were dispossess­ed of their lands by the arrival of settlers two centuries ago.

As the colonisers pushed into the vast interior of the island continent, they were resisted by the local population and thousands of men, women and children were killed. — AFP

 ?? —AFP photo ?? (Left to right) Bavarian Minister for Science and Art Bernd Sibler, Fourmile, the director of the museum of the of the five continents Uta Werlich and Wood pose in front of the coffin with the remains of an Australian aboriginal in the museum of the five continents in Munich, southern Germany.
—AFP photo (Left to right) Bavarian Minister for Science and Art Bernd Sibler, Fourmile, the director of the museum of the of the five continents Uta Werlich and Wood pose in front of the coffin with the remains of an Australian aboriginal in the museum of the five continents in Munich, southern Germany.

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