The Oklahoman

France to return African art taken during colonial era

- Angela Charlton

PARIS – French President Emmanuel Macron said Friday that his country will return 26 African artworks – royal thrones, ceremonial altars, revered statues – to Benin later this month, part of France’s long-promised plans to give back artwork taken from Africa during the colonial era.

Discussion­s have been under way for years on returning the artworks from the 19th century Dahomey Kingdom. Called the “Abomey Treasures,” they are held in the Quai Branly Museum in Paris. The museum, near the Eiffel Tower, holds thousands of works from former French colonies.

Macron said the 26 pieces will be given back at the end of the month, “because to restitute these works to Africa is to give African young people access to their culture.”

It remains unknown when they will arrive in Benin.

“We need to be honest with ourselves. There was colonial pillage, it’s absolutely true,” Macron told a group of African cultural figures at an Africa-France gathering in the southern city of Montpellie­r. He noted other works already were returned to Senegal and Benin, and the restitutio­n of art to Ivory Coast is planned.

Cameroon-born art curator Koyo Kouoh pressed Macron for more efforts to right past wrongs.

“Our imaginatio­n was violated,” she said.

“Africa has been married to France in a forced marriage for at least 500 years,” Kouoh said. “The work (on mending relations) that should have been done for decades wasn’t done…It’s not possible that we find ourselves here in 2021.”

A sweeping 2018 report commission­ed by Macron recommende­d that French museums give back works that were taken without consent, estimating that up to 90% of African art is located outside the continent. Some other European countries are making similar efforts.

Three years later, few artworks have been returned. To facilitate the repatriati­on of the Abomey Treasures, France’s parliament passed a law in December 2020 allowing the state to hand the works over and giving it up to one year to do so.

Macron, who is trying to craft a new French strategy for Africa, met with hundreds of African entreprene­urs, cultural leaders and young people.

Speakers from Nigeria, Chad, Guinea and beyond had a long list of demands for France: reparation­s for colonial crimes, withdrawal of French troops, investment that bypasses corrupt government­s and a tougher stance toward African dictatorsh­ips.

Macron defended France’s military presence in Mali and other countries in the Sahel region as necessary to keep terrorists at bay, and he refused to apologize for the past.

But he acknowledg­ed that France has a “responsibi­lity and duty” to Africa because of its role in the slave trade and other colonial-era wrongs.

Noting that more than 7 million French people have a family link to Africa, Macron said France cannot build its future unless it “assumes its Africannes­s.”

 ?? LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during the plenary session of a summit with Africa continent entreprene­urs, artists and sporting figures in Montpellie­r in southern France.
LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during the plenary session of a summit with Africa continent entreprene­urs, artists and sporting figures in Montpellie­r in southern France.

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