British university to return Benin Bronze to Nigeria 'within weeks'

Reuters

Published Mar 25, 2021 07:00

By Libby George and Paul Carsten
LAGOS/ABUJA, March 25 (Reuters) - The University of Aberdeen
said on Thursday it would return a Benin Bronze to Nigeria
within weeks, one of the first public institutions to do so more
than a century after Britain looted the sculptures and auctioned
them to Western museums and collectors.
The university said the sculpture of an Oba, or ruler, of
the Kingdom of Benin, had left Nigeria in an "extremely immoral"
fashion, leading it to reach out to authorities in 2019 to
negotiate its return.
Pressure has mounted to return to their places of origin the
Benin Bronzes - actually copper alloy relief sculptures - and
other artefacts taken by colonial powers. Neil Curtis, Aberdeen's head of museums and special
collections, said the Bronze, purchased in 1957, had been
"blatantly looted."
"It became clear we had to do something," Curtis said.
Professor Abba Isa Tijani, director general of Nigeria's
National Commission for Museums and Monuments, said the
importance of displaying the Bronze inside Nigeria for the first
time in more than 120 years was inexpressible.
"It's part of our identity, part of our heritage... which
has been taken away from us for many years," Tijani said.
Britain's soldiers seized thousands of metal castings and
sculptures from the Kingdom of Benin, then separate from
British-ruled Nigeria, in 1897.
The British Museum, which holds hundreds of the sculptures,
has alongside several other museums formed a Benin Dialogue
Group to discuss displaying them in Benin City, some officially
on loan. It has said discussions are ongoing.
Germany is in talks to send back 440 Benin Bronzes as early
as the autumn, according to newspaper reports, while the
University of Cambridge's Jesus College said it had finalised
approvals in December to return another Bronze. Tijani said U.S.
museums had also agreed to return two more Bronzes.
The governor of Edo state, of which Benin City is the
capital, plans to build a centre to store and study the returned
artefacts by the end of 2021, and a permanent museum by 2025.
Artist and Edo state native Victor Ehikhamenor said he hoped
the decision would prompt others to follow suit.
"Because some of these things are missing from our
environment, people are not able to contextualize where we are
coming from," Ehikhamenor said.

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