Pohwith is a sacred winter drum Ysleta del Sur Pueblo is a native American tribe. They play around the tool, pray and dance, which is fashionable with cotton and white tail deer.
However, in 1882 he gained the Dutch collector in Herman FC, the drum mostly sits in the dark closets of Netherlands. However, however, the 350-year-old artifact is one of the seven objects returned to Tribera, marking the first refund of the artifices of the United States cultural heritage.
The governor E. Michael Silvas, a member of Texas-based tribe, which formally accepted in a Leiden ceremony, said it was emotional momentum. “Each Pueblo has its own battery,” he said Art diary. “You have to pray, you need to feed, you have to talk to him, you need to give it to the sun. You are feeding the drum life.
“There’s so much emotion through my heart … Our grandfather heard our prayers.”
As for the artifacts gained in colonial years, the Netherlands sees the global frontrunner. 2020 report He recommended a ethical approach from the country’s Culture Council, “it has been stolen in the principle of the principle”. The government established the process of managing applications unintentionally, or in particular returned objects of special culture, and was returned in 2023 in 478 Objects in Indonesia and Sri Lanka.
Wayne modest, Wayne shelf, Wereldmuseum, Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Leid, said he was giving 60 years ago, facing the future. “Renewalpoints are not new, they happened in a very long time,” said Art diary.
“We don’t feel like such a loss. We don’t feel like a feeling of guilt or embarrassment about the past. It’s the responsibility of the future.”
Lilian Gonçalves-Ho Kang, President of the Association of the Collection of the Netherlands Collection, directed representatives of the Tribe and Dutch museum representatives, explaining the drum And other objects were not honestly acquired and matched their real owners. “The Netherlands’ buyer thought nothing about using bribery and coercion. The seller did not allow for sale and the community didn’t want a sale at all,” he said.
“For 142 years, these cultural objects have been here, being inanimate, to lighten the curiosity of the visitors … And all the time, they were longing home.”