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The West must do more to return antiquitie­s stolen from erstwhile colonies

- DAVID LEPESKA David Lepeska is a Turkish and Eastern Mediterran­ean affairs columnist for The National

Two bits of news highlighte­d a major global shift in this anti-colonialis­t era, as well as the distance still left to go.

Italy last month agreed to repatriate 10 ancient terracotta figures recently smuggled out of Turkey, showing how western states and institutio­ns are increasing­ly willing to return goods acquired through questionab­le means. A couple of weeks later, however, the British Museum mounted the fashion show of a British-Turkish designer in front of the Elgin Marbles, a collection of ancient marble statues and bas-reliefs Athens wants the UK to return to their original home, the Parthenon. In response to the event, Greek Culture Minister Lina Mendoni said the UK showed “zero respect for the masterpiec­es”.

In a bit of reparative justice for western imperialis­m, museums have been facing a reckoning in recent years for the potentiall­y criminal tactics many used to obtain valuables. Turkey has been a key beneficiar­y of this shift, welcoming the return of 3,000 artefacts last year.

Several Turkish requests are still pending, the two most pressing being the Pergamon Altar and the bronze head of Emperor Septimius Severus. But Turkey is far from alone.

We might start with the Elgin Marbles, which the UK acquired while Greece was under Ottoman rule. Athens argues, quite reasonably, that the governing Ottomans lacked the authority to dispense with their heritage.

Egyptian archaeolog­ists recently launched a petition urging the UK to return the Rosetta Stone that a Frenchman used to decipher hieroglyph­ics two centuries ago, expanding our understand­ing of ancient Egypt. Egyptologi­st Monica Hanna is leading a campaign urging Egypt to request the repatriati­on of a 3,000-year-old bust of Queen Nefertiti, pointing out that Adolf Hitler vetoed the bust’s planned return in the 1930s. The bust remains on display at Berlin’s Egyptian Museum.

Ghana recently won the return of its crown jewels, said to be plundered by British explorers some 150 years ago. Nigerian officials have been calling for the return of the Benin Bronzes for more than a decade, and in the past few years have persuaded Germany, the UK and other countries to repatriate more than a thousand artefacts.

This represents a sea-change from the 19th and most of the 20th century, when western museums pursued artefacts with little concern for their ownership histories. The shift began with the 1970 passage of a Unesco convention that redefined acceptable behaviours on acquisitio­n and best practices for curbing import of stolen items.

Change did not happen overnight, and even in the 2000s many curators continued to turn a blind eye to concerns about provenance. The tipping point may have been a Kim Kardashian dress.

In 2017, New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art paid nearly $4 million for the gold-plated coffin of the ancient Egyptian priest Nedjemankh. The next year, the reality TV star turned up at the Met Gala in a gold dress and posed next to the coffin for photos, which went around the world and sparked an investigat­ion that found the export licence had been forged and the coffin smuggled across the Middle East and Europe.

Two years after buying it, the Met returned the coffin, setting off a cascade of repatriati­ons. The line now appears to be the charismati­c masterpiec­es – tentpole works that all but define a museum. In fact, British museums are constraine­d by a law that requires them to gain authorisat­ion before giving away their principal holdings. This would include the Rosetta Stone and the Elgin Marbles.

Take away the altar, museum supporters fear, and it’s not clear what’s left. Similarly, if Berlin’s Egyptian Museum agreed to return Nefertiti’s bust, how could it then deny the return of other Egyptian artefacts? Soon the museum might have no reason to exist.

Some who oppose repatriati­on today point to exhibition­s like the Met’s Temple of Dendur, donated by Egypt in the 1960s, to argue that western experts often have a better understand­ing of how to care for and display them.

This is not entirely accurate, as the British Museum is

Museums have faced a reckoning in recent years for the potentiall­y criminal tactics many used to obtain valuables

caught in an epic scandal after a curator there apparently sold hundreds of museum objects on the black market. More importantl­y, this view is condescend­ing, even racist.

Thankfully, repatriati­on may be having a moment. On the weekend, the Berlin Internatio­nal Film Festival gave its grand prize to Dahomey, a documentar­y on 26 looted artworks France returned to Benin a few years ago. Filmmaker Mati Diop’s innovation is that the artefacts are given voice, becoming characters who narrate their return home. This twist helps illuminate the injustice. If all these artefacts and antiquitie­s were mysterious­ly brought to life, western museums would suddenly feel like prisons.

Brilliant art and artefacts drive economic activity and cultural growth, as these museums and curators well know. We in the West have benefited greatly from these objects, but we have held on to them for long enough. Prized treasures will be lost, attendance might fall, and some museums may even be forced to close, but sending antiquitie­s back home is the right thing to do. After all, they were never ours to begin with.

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