The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Nehanda, Kaguvi remains head home

- Lincoln Towindo Senior Reporter

A team of Zimbabwean experts is preparing to travel to the United Kingdom for a due diligence exercise required to positively identify several human remains believed to be of First Chimurenga heroes and heroines shipped as war trophies to Europe during the early years of colonial occupation.

Government has, for years, been pushing for the repatriati­on of dozens of skulls of First Chimurenga war heroes, who were beheaded by British invasion forces at the height of the first uprisings against colonialis­m, and are being held on display at some British museums.

Some of the skulls are believed to belong to Mbuya Nehanda, Sekuru Kaguvi, Chief Mashayamom­be Chinengund­u and Chief Makoni Chingaira, among others.

British authoritie­s had earlier this year invited Zimbabwe to deploy a team of experts to verify the origins of a catalogue of skulls in March, but travel restrictio­ns necessitat­ed by the Covid-19 pandemic delayed the trip.

National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe ( NMMZ) director Dr Godfrey Mahachi told The Sunday Mail that the team will be dispatched once travel restrictio­ns are relaxed.

“Because of travel restrictio­ns, our experts had to postpone the trip to the UK and wait for the situation to reach some kind of normalcy,” said Dr Mahachi.

“But this is something that clearly remains a priority. But now we are just waiting for the restrictio­ns to be relaxed a bit more and once they signal that they are ready to receive us, then we will be travelling there.”

He said the experts will comb through a litany of historical documents and archival material held by British museums to ascertain whether the skulls originated from

Zimbabwe.

“The purpose of travel is to do a due diligence exercise; a due diligence exercise in the sense that we want to establish whether what they have as human remains originated from Zimbabwe.

“We just don’t want to collect anything that is offered; we want to do an examinatio­n of the records to satisfy ourselves that they have skulls of Zimbabwean origin. Once we establish that, we then go to the issue of repatriati­on.”

UK Parliament

The issue came up for discussion in the British House of Commons a fortnight ago when parliament­arian Stephen Ferry asked the UK Secretary for Culture, Caroline Dinenage, about the progress on the repatriati­on of the war trophies.

“To ask the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, what progress is being made on the repatriati­on from the UK

to Zimbabwe of the remains of (a) Mbuya Nehanda, (b) Sekuru Kaguvi and (c) the 25 First Chimurenga fighters,” asked Ferry.

Responding to the question, Ms Dinenage said:“It is not confirmed that the remains of Mbuya Nehanda, Sekuru Kaguvi and the 25 First Chimurenga fighters are held in a UK institutio­n.

“If it was determined that they were in the UK, and a request for their return was received, the decision to do so would be a matter for that institutio­n to consider.”

Last year, the National History Museum in London submitted a report to Zimbabwean authoritie­s detailing the origins of several human remains they were holding as part of their catalogue.

The archival report, compiled by a team of British experts, traced the origins of individual skulls using documentat­ion that was used at the time to facilitate the artefacts’ shipping to Britain.

The experts pored through numerous documents kept in historical archives in Britain and South Africa in order to ascertain the skulls’ positive identifica­tion.

As part of the process, the report details were then corroborat­ed with locally available documentat­ion before a consolidat­ed report was drafted.

The skulls are expected to undergo DNA testing to verify who they belonged to.

During the First Chimurenga, British invasion forces publicly beheaded vanquished “troublesom­e” resistance movement leaders partly as a means to intimidate locals who were part of the struggle.

The decapitate­d heads were also used as trophies by the victors to collect hefty rewards from colonial authoritie­s.

 ??  ?? Mbuya Nehanda
Mbuya Nehanda

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