The Sunday Telegraph

We must end the West’s fixation with cultural repatriati­on

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The West has taken a very strange turn in recent years. Instead of seeking meaningful – even joyous – survival as the leaders of the free world, we have turned in on ourselves. We should be shoring up our strength as the planet becomes ever more starkly carved up between the forces of good and bad, but instead we have become obsessed with baroque ways of underminin­g and naysaying ourselves.

Take the treatment of our history which – once regarded as complex, complete with glorious and ignominiou­s bits – has become a relentless ideologica­l lesson about racism. It is no longer a history, but an angry, self-abasing mea culpa. Thus, not content to study and glean insight from the multi-sided past, cultural arbiters – guardians of our cultural objects, in the most literal sense – want to correct the past, and make amends for our allegedly evil, racist crimes of colonial greed.

In Britain the fixation is all-consuming, and the vogue for repatriati­on of objects “plundered” by imperial forces has been gathering pace. The latest instalment is the return of a Benin bronze stave by the Great North Museum in Newcastle, following similar action by museums in Europe and the US. It’s just a stave, some might say. Or it’s just a cockerel, such as the one that Jesus College Cambridge recently sent smugly, and with great fanfare, back to Nigeria.

But it isn’t just a few objects. It is a slippery slope that begs the question: where does this end? Western civilisati­on is a patchwork of cultural inheritanc­e from a huge variety of sources, the vast majority of which can never pass the stringent moral tests of the righteous elites. Should we dismantle the whole culture? If we seek to make drastic amends for anything tainted by racism or colonialis­m, we will have nothing left, from our greatest, impeccably cared-for treasures (which are also peerless educationa­l resources) to literature and philosophy.

The return of objects gained in the course of imperial expedition­s is particular­ly wrong-headed. Empire was the universal form of governance until relatively recently, with even the most moderate, humane voices arguing that, if run right and with humanity, the British empire was conducive to peace and prosperity.

Indeed, the history of the world is completely enmeshed with the existence of empire. Yet now empire must be seen as unequivoca­lly bad, full stop.

Cue the colourless droning of brainwashe­d curators that, in the words of Vee Pollock, the academic in charge of the Newcastle collection: “There is no real question for us that the right thing to do was to offer its return.” But of course there’s a question; it’s called “context”.

Meanwhile, Kevin Mirren, director of Tyne and Wear archives and museums, intoned that “repatriati­on can be a powerful cultural, spiritual and symbolic act which recognises the wrongs of the past and restores some sense of justice”.

Come again? We are now operating cultural policy in Britain on the basis of spiritual power and the principles of restorativ­e justice? It’s as if our understand­ing not just of history, but of the present – of Western culture in general – has been hijacked by hippies.

On the surface, it seems perfectly noble to want to make amends. But the reality is not so clear-cut. These acquisitio­ns took place within a framework of military-imperial action that fell within internatio­nal, social and political norms at the time.

And the repatriati­on of Benin objects is even more complicate­d. In an open letter to Sonia Alleyne, the master of Jesus College, Robert Tombs, the Cambridge professor of history and writer for this newspaper, suggested that the college at least be honest about the full scope of the history it was purporting to condemn and avenge. As he pointed out, the college “presented this as an unambiguou­sly moral decision, made unanimousl­y”.

What was not hinted at was “the type of society that the Kingdom of Benin was until British interventi­on in 1897 – a brutal slave-raiding and slavetradi­ng society, in which enslaved victims were regularly and horribly killed, often being buried alive as a ritual”.

Tombs does not necessaril­y object to the gesture of return, then, but its implicatio­n: a violent nation, by dint of being African, can never be culpable, only ever violently raided. Of course that doesn’t mean that everything the West ever did was right, but in this case at least it should give us all pause.

As the intensifyi­ng fight over the rightful home of the Elgin marbles shows, there is momentum to the cause. But insisting on morally correcting history itself is to demand the disbanding of our culture, a project as nihilistic as it is futile.

It seems noble to want to make amends. But the reality is not so clear-cut

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