Toronto Star

French museum returns remains of ‘valiant’ Algerian anti-colonial fighters

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ALGIERS— After decades in a French museum, the skulls of 24 Algerians decapitate­d for resisting French colonial forces were formally repatriate­d to Algeria on Friday in an elaborate ceremony led by the teary-eyed Algerian president.

A 21-gun salute thundered from Algiers’ internatio­nal airport as a military plane touched down, carrying the remains. Boats in the ports of Algiers sounded their horns to welcome the arrival.

The return of the skulls was the result of years of efforts by Algerian historians, and comes amid a growing global reckoning with the legacy of colonialis­m.

“The valiant resistance fighters who refused the colonizati­on of their country by imperial France were displayed immorally for decades, like vulgar objects of antiquity, without respect for their dignity, their memory. That is the monstrous face of colonizati­on,” Algerian army chief Said Chengiha said in a speech.

“Algeria is living a special day today,” he said.

The 24 fought French colonial forces who occupied Algeria in 1830 and took part in an 1849 revolt. After they were decapitate­d, their skulls were taken to France as trophies.

In 2011, Algerian historian and researcher Ali Farid Belkadi discovered the skulls at the Museum of Man in Paris, across from the Eiffel Tower, and alerted Algerian authoritie­s.

The researcher lobbied for years for their return, and Algeria’s then-president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, eventually launched the formal repatriati­on request. French President Emmanuel Macron agreed in 2018, but bureaucrat­ic obstacles delayed the return until now.

The remains will be on public display at the Palace of Culture in the capital Saturday, and then will be buried in a special funeral east of Algiers on Sunday — the 58th anniversar­y of Algeria’s independen­ce from France after a long and bloody war.

In tears, Algerian President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune presided over Friday’s ceremony, alongside the heads of both houses of parliament and top military officials. Three MiG jets escorted the Algerian Ilyushin military plane carrying the remains.

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