Bangkok Post

Its rightful owners

France weighs how to return Africa’s plundered art

- KATY LEE MARIE WOLFROM

Half-man, half-beast, the tall African statues dominate a busy gallery in Paris’s Quai Branly museum. But few of the visitors are aware they are looking at what might be considered stolen goods.

The three imposing wooden carvings were plundered by French troops in 1892 from the kingdom of Dahomey — modern-day Benin.

“I came here to learn about how these objects were intended to be used, more than how they were brought here,” said Michael Fanning, a student from New Orleans, peering up at the statues.

“But it does make me think we should give them back to whoever made them.”

From London to Berlin, Europe’s museums are packed with hundreds of thousands of colonial-era items. Increasing­ly, they are facing the awkward question of whether they should be there at all.

The “Scramble For Africa”, as Europe’s 19th-century land grab came to be known, brought with it a clamour for trinkets from conquered territorie­s, so exotic to the eyes of the colonisers.

Bought, bartered and in some cases simply stolen by soldiers, missionari­es and anthropolo­gists, they ended up in museums and private collection­s all over Europe.

The controvers­y is hardly new, nor does it concern Africa alone.

Star lawyer Amal Clooney, wife of Hollywood actor George, has advised Athens on its bid to reclaim the Parthenon marbles, vast sculptures which have been in Britain since the 1800s.

The massive Koh-i-Noor diamond, part of Britain’s crown jewels and claimed by India, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanista­n, is another spectacula­r example.

But in Africa, a speech by French President Emmanuel Macron has spurred hope that things may be about to change.

“Africa’s heritage cannot just be in European private collection­s and museums,” Macron said in Burkina Faso in November.

He charged two experts with working out how to give African artefacts back within five years, prompting speculatio­n that museums across Europe could be pressured to follow suit.

“Suffice to say that he’ll have made European curators quake in their boots,” said Pascal Blanchard, a historian of French colonialis­m.

French art historian Benedicte Savoy, one of the experts appointed by Macron along with Senegalese writer Felwine Sarr, described her new job as “a hell of a challenge”.

Museums have l ong wrestled with a tangle of legal and ethical problems concerning who really

“owns” such objects.

Even in well-documented cases of pillaging, the l aw often prevents countries from giving them back.

Last year France flatly refused Benin’s bid t o reclaim its treasures, saying they were exempt from seizure as state property.

European conservati­onists have also raised practical concerns, worrying artefacts could be stolen or handled improperly if given to inexperien­ced museums in politicall­y unstable countries.

Blanchard said countries like Nigeria, with well-establishe­d museums, had “all the ingredient­s for solid restitutio­n claims”.

But others, as poor as Chad, “do not currently have the museums and cultural-heritage services capable of restoring and displaying these objects”, he said.

Yet many African officials say these treasures should be at home, attracting tourists and boosting national pride. Few cases inspire more outrage than the Benin bronzes, hundreds of exquisite metal plaques seized in 1897 by British troops from the Kingdom of Benin, in modern-day Nigeria.

Most are now in the British Museum and the Ethnologic­al Museum of Berlin.

For Crusoe Osagie, spokesman for the governor of Nigeria’s Edo State, it is simply wrong that his children must go to Britain or Germany to see their heritage in a glassfront­ed cabinet.

“These objects belong to us and were forcefully denied to our possession,” he said.

As for suggestion­s that Africans might not look after such objects, he finds the idea insulting.

“It’s like asking me how to look after my child,” he said. “We are ready to look after them with great care.”

Some colonial-era artefacts have been handed back over the years on an ad hoc basis, and UN cultural agency Unesco has mediated successful­ly in several disputes since the 1970s.

European and US museums have also been meeting with Nigerian officials since 2007, seeking a solution for the Benin bronzes but with few results.

The idea of loaning the bronzes, as well as Ethiopian items displayed in Britain, has been floated, but some African officials are affronted by the suggestion of “borrowing” what they see as their own property.

For want of better solutions, many museums are simply trying to approach the issue more sensitivel­y.

German museums have taken a lead — mindful of their previous experience with Jewish-owned artworks looted by the Nazis.

At Berlin’s new Humboldt Forum, labels are set to include details of how colonial-era items came to be in the collection.

And Hamburg’s MKG museum is running an exhibition which focuses not so much on its three Benin bronzes, but on the fact that they were looted.

Its curator, Silke Reuther, said visitors appreciate the museum’s honesty.

“We are not afraid to show something which is not a beautiful story,” she said.

 ??  ?? King Ghezo’s throne of Abomey in Benin, dating back to the early 19th century.
King Ghezo’s throne of Abomey in Benin, dating back to the early 19th century.
 ??  ?? ABOVE Heads of a royal ancestor — artworks of the Kingdom of Benin from the end of the 18th century.
ABOVE Heads of a royal ancestor — artworks of the Kingdom of Benin from the end of the 18th century.
 ??  ?? RIGHT Funerary crown of the Kingdom of Dahomey, dating from 1860-89.
RIGHT Funerary crown of the Kingdom of Dahomey, dating from 1860-89.

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