Nine decades after the founder of the University of Minnesota's anthropology department dug up more than 2,000 Native objects in New Mexico, the university is finally taking concerted action to bring them home.
The university's Weisman Art Museum has come under particular fire for dragging its feet on the process, launched 30 years ago when Congress passed the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), requiring federally funded institutions to return Native remains and sacred objects to tribes.
The pace accelerated after the retirement in June of longtime Weisman director Lyndel King, who had argued that such objects should remain in museums even as she took steps to comply with the law.
The Minnesota Indian Affairs Council subsequently passed a resolution chiding the university for its "resistance" and accusing it of treating "sacred funerary objects ... as university property."
Why has it taken so long? In short, it's complicated. But that doesn't let the university, or the Weisman, off the hook.
"I can't speak for the reasoning ... by the former director of the museum, but it is basically a failure to comply with the law," said associate anthropology Prof. Kat Hayes, part of a U committee formed to help return the objects.
Created between 1000 and 1150 A.D., the objects come from the Mimbres Valley in southwest New Mexico, where Prof. Albert Jenks led a series of archaeological digs from 1928 to 1931. His team excavated the remains of more than 150 Native people along with the objects now in the Weisman's collection. Transferred to the museum in 1992 by the anthropology department, they include stone tools, arrowheads and points, beads, pendants and more than 1,000 ceramic bowls.
Mimbres bowls are highly prized for their black or brown paintings depicting birds, animals or human figures. Often found in graves, they were used in death rituals to cover the head of the deceased, or stacked beside the body.