Lagos (AFP)
- The debate over the restitution of thousands of African cultural artefacts
from France has become heated, but in West Africa conservators prefer to call
it "collaboration" and are preparing for their return.
The French
presidency announced on Friday night that it was restoring "without
delay" 26 works plundered by the French army in 1892 and claimed by the
authorities in Benin.
The
recommendations come with the delivery of a non-binding report that proposes a
change in legislation and urges the return of museum artefacts to Africa from
France.
Alain
Godonou, a Beninese conservator responsible for heritage at the new national
agency for tourism promotion in Benin, has been working on this issue for more
than 30 years and says now is the time for reflection.
The small
West African country of Benin, formerly Dahomey, was home to the kingdom of
Abomey (1600-1894) and priceless wealth.
But instead
of sitting in the capital of Porto-Novo, the throne of King Glele from 1858 is
one of the centrepieces of the 70,000 African objects kept at the Musée du quai
Branly-Jacques Chirac in Paris.
"To
keep war booty in countries that are now friends and collaborate doesn't make
sense," Godonou told AFP.
"It's
a relief but it's only the beginning. There is still so much to be done so that
our youth can access this heritage that will make them proud."
Sensitive question
Sensitive question
"We
don't want them to have our objects just for the sake of it," Godonou
continues.
"The
cultural education of African youth is important and these objects will help to
root them."
This
includes a rehabilitation of museums. For years, Europeans have justified
keeping the treasured artefacts by arguing that African countries didn't have
the facilities to take care of their cultural heritage.
But in many
countries -- including Senegal, Ivory Coast, Gabon and Benin -- plans are
underway new museums have been built and plans are underway for yet more.
Beninese
President Patrice Talon, whose goal is to make tourism one of the pillars of
the national economy, has approved the sites for five museums that will open in
2020 to honour the kings of Abomey and the Amazons, the all-female military
regiment in Dahomey.
The
country's minister of foreign affairs Aurelien Agbenonci told AFP on Saturday
the government is "delighted" with the decision, which he said was
"an invitation to get to work quickly."
Ousmane
Aledji, in charge of heritage for the Benin presidency, welcomed the "new
form of cultural exchange" with France.
"We're
not for a violent claim, but we want to put in place measures for progressive
restitution," he says.
His
sentiment was echoed in Abidjan, where the director of the museum of
civilisation of Ivory Coast Silvie Memel Kassi said "it's not a bad thing
in itself that they were preserved and indexed in France."
![]() |
French
President Emmanuel Macron, during a visit to
Burkina Faso last year, said
"Africa's heritage cannot just
be in European private collections and
museums"
(AFP Photo/ludovic MARIN)
|
"Ancestral pieces"
The
national museum of Abidjan was renovated last year, but a larger museum is sill
in the works.
In this
case, said Kassi, "we could start talking about a definitive
restitution."
She added
that "the important thing is to work together, we want to have access to
these objects, we need this memory, these objects are a memory."
In Dakar,
the museum of black civilisation, whose inauguration is scheduled for December
6, will be ready one day to house the objects, pledges Kassi.
"We
have operational reserves that can accommodate such objects," said the
Senegalese museum director Hamady Bocoum, stressing the works may not
necessarily end up in museums and could go back to communities who may
"decide to put them in the altars of the ancestors."
"These
works came from our ancestors," said Taho Toubo, a traditional leader from
Ivory Coast.
"I
pray for the ancestors that their pieces are returned."



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.