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Sweden hands over Maori remains

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
Sweden hands over Maori remains

Sweden on Wednesday returned the skeletal remains of Maori people, which were removed from New Zealand in the mid to late nineteenth century.

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The handover was carried out at the Museum of World Culture in Gothenburg, spokeswoman Tina Sjögren said, explaining that remains held in two museums, the National History Museum and the Museum of World Culture were being returned to New Zealand.

Two representatives from the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa and New Zealand's ambassador to Sweden Barbara Bridge took part in a traditional ceremony held at Gothenburg's Museum of World Culture.

"We are going to do a traditional Maori ceremony ... we are talking to the spirits and acknowledging that even though the bodies are departed the spirits have followed us and are in our memory," Teherekiekie Herewin, the manager of repatriation at the Museum of New Zealand, told AFP.

Herewin explained Sweden was returning one skull, one skeleton, two arm fragments and one hand that had been mummified.

The remains come from at least three and up to five individuals.

"The information from the museums indicated that (the remains) are Maori and they are from New Zealand, but there are very little details" about the remains and where they are from, Herewin said.

The director of the National Museums of World Culture said his museums were now aiming "to work actively for the repatriation of human remains younger than around 200 years," adding that human remains in Western museums were "mostly the result of colonial relationships and a racist view of the world," he said in a statement.

On Saturday Sweden returned 22 skulls taken from Hawaii.

Swedish museums have since 2004 returned the remains of dozens of Aborigines to Australia and a totem pole to a Canadian aboriginal tribe.

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