Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EDINBURGH UNI TO RETURN NINE HUMAN SKULLS TO SRI LANKA

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Edinburgh University will return a set of nine human skulls to their homeland of Sri Lanka in a repatriati­on ceremony today, Edinburgh News yesterday reported.

The skulls, thought to be over 200 years old, were taken from their place of origin more than a century ago.

Even though these remains have been in Edinburgh for many years, their spirits have remained with us in Sri Lanka

They will be presented to Wanniya Uruwarige, chief of the jungle-dwelling Vedda people, after anatomy researcher­s at the University agreed to the Vedda’s claim as the earliest inhabitant­s of Sri Lanka.

Chief Wanniya Uruwarige will attend the presentati­on at the University’s Playfair Library in Vedda dress. The Vedda plan to display the skulls in a collection that will showcase their history as traditiona­l huntergath­erers and forest-dwellers. The Vedda have experience­d major disruption to their way of life due to civil war and land loss, and researcher­s suggest that the traditiona­l life of the group may not continue for more than two generation­s. Chief Wanniya Uruwarige, said: “The dead are very important in Vedda society.

“Every year we hold a special ceremony to honour those who are no longer with us.

Professor Tom Gillingwat­er, Chair of Anatomy at the University of Edinburgh, said: “We are delighted to welcome the Vedda tribespeop­le to Edinburgh and mark the return of their ancestral remains.

“Our vast and diverse collection is often used in research breakthrou­ghs and teaching. We are pleased to be able to return these culturally-important artefacts to help ensure the Vedda’s legacy endures for generation­s to come. The ceremony marks the end of a study by Anatomy researcher­s at Edinburgh University and researcher­s at the Max Planck Institute for Science of Human History in Germany, which confirmed the Vedda as

Sri Lanka’s earliest inhabitant­s. Edinburgh University has a 12,000-strong collection of anatomical remains on display at the Anatomical Museum. They are now used for research into the history of genetics, diet and the movement of people. Museums across the UK are facing requests for the return of treasures taken from their country of origin, including neandertha­l skulls, pyramid stones and the remains of a giant sloth found in Chile.

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