New York Post

NO MUSEUM PEACE

Native Am. exhibit close put on management

- By GEORGETT ROBERTS and DEIRDRE BARDOLF

The American Museum of Natural History could have avoided the sudden and shocking shutdown of all its Native American exhibits had it made an effort over the years to “reconcile and work with tribes,” a tribal leader told The Post on Saturday.

The museum closed two halls — almost 10,000 square feet of exhibition space — Friday to comply with the revamped regulation­s made to the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriati­on Act, requiring the museum to send human remains and cultural items back to recognized tribes from where they originate.

“These big institutio­ns that are shutting down this many square feet could have taken preemptive steps to try to reconcile and work with tribes, and it took a change in NAGPRA regulation­s to take them down,” said Sunshine BearThomas, the cultural preservati­on director and tribal historic preservati­on officer for the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska.

Small tribal repatriati­on teams like hers will be busy as institutio­ns reach out for consultati­on, but it’s a “problem they welcome,” Bear-Thomas told The Post. She is not aware of any Winnebago artifacts at the AMNH, but said she “wants to bring our items home” wherever they might be kept.

“It should always be up to the tribe what they want to do as sovereign nations,” she added.

A day after the famed Upper West Side museum abruptly stripped its spaces dedicated to the Eastern Woodlands and Great Plains tribes, rolling walls were in place to block off the exhibits.

“The artifacts in this case have been removed from view because the museum does not have consent to display them,” reads a sign posted near the restricted area.

The stunning changes were announced Friday by director Sean Decatur, who said the exhibits are “severely outdated” and that there is a “growing urgency” to change its relationsh­ip with tribes.

NAGPRA implementa­tion has been slow, but the Biden administra­tion has pushed to speed up the process, which led to new rules finalized in December.

The law applies to human remains, funerary objects, sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony, according to Decatur.

An immediate effect of the closures will be the suspension of school field trips to the Eastern Woodlands hall, Decatur said.

“I think New Yorkers should have had a chance to say goodbye,” said one museum-goer Saturday, disappoint­ed that there wasn’t an earlier warning.

People flooded the halls Friday to get their last peek at the exhibits, which featured items such an Iroquois longhouse, a Menominee birchbark canoe and clothing from Cree, Cheyenne, Assiniboin­e and Crow tribes.

The artifacts are expected to return once tribes have been consulted, giving visitors “proper context,” a museum staffer said, adding, “These communitie­s still exist . . . [we] might as well show how vibrant they were, how vibrant they are.”

The museum did not respond to questions from The Post.

 ?? ?? NOTHING TO SEE HERE: Signs on rolling walls Saturday announce the American Museum of Natural History’s closure of Native American exhibits.
NOTHING TO SEE HERE: Signs on rolling walls Saturday announce the American Museum of Natural History’s closure of Native American exhibits.

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