Montreal Gazette

B.C. First Nation wants totem pole returned

Nisga'a members travel to Scotland for discussion­s

- BRIEANNA CHARLEBOIS

VANCOUVER • Delegates from the Nisga'a First Nation are in Scotland this week to discuss repatriati­ng a memorial totem pole it says was stolen nearly a century ago.

Seven members, including Nisga'a Nation Chief Earl Stephens, have travelled from British Columbia and are scheduled to meet with staff, curators and politician­s at the National Museum of Scotland on Monday.

“This will be the first time in living memory that members of the House of Ni'isjoohl will be able to see the memorial pole with our own eyes,” Stephens said in a news release. “This visit will be deeply emotional for us all.”

The Nisga'a totem pole, also known as the Ni'isjoohl memorial pole, was hand-carved in the 1860s. It depicts the story of Ts'wawit, a warrior who was next in line to be chief before he was killed in a conflict with a neighbouri­ng nation.

The nation said the pole was taken in 1929 without its consent by ethnograph­er Marius Barbeau while members were away from their villages for the annual hunting and food harvesting season, and it was later sold it to the museum in Scotland.

Amy Parent, a Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Education and Governance at Simon Fraser University and a representa­tive from the nation, said returning the artifact will mean restoring a piece of the nation's cultural identity.

“I want our children to wake up every day and not have to search so hard for a story of who we are,” she said in an interview.

She said the delegates intend to discuss their “exact intentions” with museum and government officials to request the legal title of the pole be transferre­d back to the nation.

“At this point, they have been positive in terms of their communicat­ion with us and their desire to ensure that they are being culturally respectful upon their reception of our delegation,” Parent said.

“We're trying to be cautiously optimistic in terms of the conversati­on that will unfold.”

Parent said this isn't the first time Nisga'a Nation representa­tives have travelled to Europe in an effort to identify and reclaim its cultural artifacts. She said a group had visited the National Museum of Scotland in 1991, but was told the pole was too fragile to be removed.

However, Parent said she later discovered it had been moved when the museum went through renovation­s.

“Leading Canadian experts have determined that the pole is in good enough shape to be moved and they wouldn't hesitate to say that it could withstand the trip back to Canada and back to our nation,” she said.

This prompted their decision to travel back to the U.K. in the hope of retrieving it, she said.

“I think they can help us rewrite history through this act of reparation,” Parent said. “It is the government of Scotland's opportunit­y to show the world that UNDRIP really is more than something that's symbolic.”

The United Nations Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, or UNDRIP, was establishe­d in 2007 as a framework of minimum standards for the survival and well-being of Indigenous people worldwide.

National Museums Scotland, the body which oversees the museum, said in a statement that “we welcome open dialogue and foster collaborat­ion with communitie­s for whom objects in the collection have special relevance.”

“We look forward to hosting a delegation from the Nisga'a Nation at the National Museum of Scotland to view the memorial pole, share informatio­n on it and share our procedure for considerin­g requests for the transfer of objects,” it said.

Parent said the nation also hopes the government of Scotland and National Museums Scotland will front the bill for the totem pole's return to B.C.

“The onus shouldn't be on us as a family or as a nation to have to pay for its return,” Parent said.

Should they be successful in repatriati­ng the pole, the nation said it plans to erect it inside the Nisga'a Museum, which is home to more than 300 other cultural relics.

 ?? HANDOUT-NATIONAL MUSEUMS SCOTLAND / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Seven delegates from the Nisga'a First Nation are in Scotland this week to discuss repatriati­ng a memorial totem pole that they say was stolen almost a century ago.
HANDOUT-NATIONAL MUSEUMS SCOTLAND / THE CANADIAN PRESS Seven delegates from the Nisga'a First Nation are in Scotland this week to discuss repatriati­ng a memorial totem pole that they say was stolen almost a century ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada