Give and take
By Kate Wallace
The potlatch feast practiced by British Columbia’s coastal first nations
was an elaborate sharing ceremony where months or even years worth of accumulated
goods were given away over just a few days or weeks.
It’s ironic, then, that it was items confiscated from these gift-giving
ceremonies that first raised the issue of native artifact repatriation in
Canada.
Starting in the late 1800s, when the potlatch was banned in Canada, a large
number of ceremonial items were taken by Canadian authorities. Many were not
returned to their rightful native owners for a hundred years or more.
Among the confiscated items were a number of ceremonial masks, sacred items
that found their way into museums and private collections in Canada and abroad.
One of the most famous cases occurred in 1978 when the Museum of Civilization
returned confiscated potlatch artifacts to the communities of Alert Bay and
Cape Mudge, where the federal government financed construction of two museums.
This event shone the light not just on repatriation, but on native determination
in how their cultural items are displayed and interpreted.
Since the late 1980s, most artifact repatriation negotiations have been part
of broader land claims agreements. In fact, the protection of ancestral lands
is at the heart of the Coast Salish mask’s survival, says Brian Thom,
an anthropologist who negotiates treaty rights on behalf of the Hul’qumi’num
Treaty Group. "It’s a bit of a crisis," says Thom, "they
don’t have access to the secluded natural places that these masks derive
their power from."
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