Kimberly Toney flips through a 1639 book that describes Native American cultural practices through the eyes of an English settler.
FILE - Kimberly Toney flips through a 1639 book that describes Native American cultural practices through the eyes of an English settler.
Andrew Botolino/GBH News

Repatriation to Indigenous Groups is More Than Law, It’s Human Rights

Archaeologist describes the day that lesson hit home

Archaeologist describes the day that lesson hit home

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Kimberly Toney flips through a 1639 book that describes Native American cultural practices through the eyes of an English settler.
FILE - Kimberly Toney flips through a 1639 book that describes Native American cultural practices through the eyes of an English settler.
Andrew Botolino/GBH News
Repatriation to Indigenous Groups is More Than Law, It’s Human Rights
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As an archaeologist, you picture yourself traveling to some remote location, digging into the ground, and returning to a lab in a university or museum to study the remains of past civilizations, with hopes of answering important questions.

In contrast, I’ve often found myself working to return those remains to their rightful cultures. Repatriation is the process of returning ancestral human remains and important objects to descendant populations. Since the passing of the National Museum of the American Indian Act in 1989 and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act in 1990, it has become an increasingly important part of archaeological practice, yet about 110,000 ancestors remain in collections.

This work is about more than legal obligations. To many researchers such as myself, it is a matter of human rights.

When first enacted, these laws were controversial among archaeologists. Much of this anxiety stemmed from worries about losing access to research opportunities. Some concerns were shaped by legal battles surrounding the remains of “Kennewick Man,” whom Indigenous people refer to as the “Ancient One.” This man’s remains were found in Washington state in 1996 and dated to over 8,000 years ago. Scientists won the legal right to study them, in opposition to local tribal nations’ requests, until a 2016 law returned the remains of the individual to those groups.

Over time, many archaeologists have seen that while repatriation requirements limit research in some ways, in others they have been beneficial and improved aspects of archaeologists’ relationships with Indigenous communities.

More importantly, repatriation laws have served as a partial remedy for the historical trauma of those peoples.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

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