The Scotsman

Canada demands return of skulls

● Government asks museum to send back remains of Beothuk people

- By JANE BRADLEY

The Canadian Government has made a formal request to the National Museums Scotland to repatriate the remains of two people belonging to a now-extinct First Nation.

Canada’s heritage minister Melanie Joly has sent a letter to the museums asking for the remains, of two of the last Beothuk people, to be returned to the country.

The remains - the skulls and burial objects of Nonosabasu­t and his wife Demasduit - were were discovered by a Newfoundla­nd man in 1828 and brought to Scotland, where they are now kept in the collection centre at the Edinburgh museum.

Ottawa put the National Museums Scotland on notice last year that the Canadian government would be making a formal demand for repatriati­on.

The Canadian government

0 A party of Europeans trades with the Beothuk in what is now Canada said that both provincial government leaders in Newfoundla­nd, where the skulls were buried and five Indigenous nations sent letters to the minister confirming their sup- port of the repatriati­on efforts.

A spokeswoma­n for the National Museums Scotland said the demand would be dealt with in line with the organisati­on’s Human Remains Policy. She said: “We have now received a formal request from the Canadian government for the repatriati­on of the Beothuk material currently held in the national collection­s. This will now be considered in line with our Human Remains in Collection­s Policy.”

It is believed that Nonosabasu­t was killed by John Peyton Jr and his men in 1819, while his wife was captured and later died of TB.

The couple were the aunt and uncle of Shanawdith­it, the last-surviving member of the Beothuk group, who died in 1829.

Native American campaigner Chief Mi’sel Joe, of the Miawpukek First Nation, has visited Edinburgh and seen the skulls, the removal of which he has previously compared to him travelling to Scotland to “dig up [the grave of ] Burns”.

He has led calls for the repatriati­on of the remains since 2015. In an interview in 2015, he called for the skulls to be returned.

He said: “They were stolen, they were taken, they were grave robbing if you want to call it that, and it’s long overdue that they come back to where they belong.

“Maybe what I need to do is go and dig up [Robert] Burns, maybe that’ll open somebody’s eyes.”

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