LONDON’s Natural History Museum and Cambridge University have said that they are ready to co-operate with Zimbabwe to return human remains that were taken in the colonial era.
The fresh statements come after a delegation from Zimbabwe
held talks with officials from both institutions.
The Zimbabweans are looking for the skulls of late-19th
Century anti-colonial heroes, which they believe could be in the United
Kingdom.
But these have not yet been found.
The authorities in Zimbabwe have long suspected that the
remains of some of the leaders of an uprising against British rule in the 1890s
– known as the First Chimurenga – were taken to the UK as trophies. The most
significant among them was Mbuya Nehanda who was executed in what is now the
capital, Harare and is revered as a national heroine.
In doing a search of its archive, the Natural History
Museum did uncover 11 remains “that appear to be originally from Zimbabwe” –
but its records do not connect them with Nehanda.
These include three skulls taken in 1893, thought to be
from Zimbabwe’s second city, Bulawayo, as well as remains uncovered in
mineshafts and archaeological digs and later donated.
Cambridge University’s Duckworth Laboratory has not been so
specific, simply saying it has “a small number of human remains from Zimbabwe”,
but in a statement sent to the BBC it said it had not identified any of these
as belonging to First Chimurenga figures.
The Natural History Museum, with 25 000 human remains, and
the Duckworth Laboratory, with 18 000, have some of the largest such archives
in the world. These have come from a variety of sources including archaeological
excavations of ancient sites, but for many the exact origins have been obscured
by time.
During the colonial era, body parts were sometimes removed
from battlefields or dug up from graves either as trophies or for research into
a now-discredited scientific field. Zimbabwe’s Government believes that somehow
the skulls of the country’s heroes ended up in the archives of a British
museum.
Chief among them were spiritual leaders, including Charwe
Nyakasikana, who became known as Mbuya Nehanda as she was the medium of the
revered ancestral spirit Nehanda. She was arrested after being accused of murdering
a British official.
Nehanda was then hanged and her body decapitated, it is
believed. What happened next is not clear, but in recent years, Zimbabwean
officials have made several public statements saying it ended up in the Natural
History Museum.
For Zimbabweans, the removal of the head “means that you
have literally punished the person beyond the grave”, Dr Godfrey Mahachi, the
Executive Director of the National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe, who led
the delegation to the UK, told the BBC in 2020 when the visit was being
planned.
“If the head is separated, that means that the spirit of
that person will forever linger and never settle.” Despite not finding what the
Zimbabwean delegation was looking for, both the Natural History Museum and
Cambridge University say they are committed to working with the Zimbabwean
government to repatriate what was found. – BBC.
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