Tiki Central / General Tiki
Easter Islanders want their moai returned
Pages: 1 33 replies
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tikitube
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Sat, Nov 17, 2018 10:51 AM
Thought this was interesting: [ Edited by: Tikitube 2018-11-17 10:58 ] |
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MrBaliHai
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Sun, Nov 18, 2018 7:59 AM
They'll have to pry my Moai mugs out of my cold, dead, hands... [ Edited by: MrBaliHai 2018-11-18 08:00 ] |
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Prikli Pear
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Sun, Nov 18, 2018 9:56 PM
I saw this on FB. It's actually a thoughtful, reasonable proposal they're suggesting. The offer of a native-crafted replica cut from island stone and overseen by experts is no small undertaking. The British would be remiss not to discuss this further. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 5:10 AM
Anakena Manutomatoma, told the Guardian. “Once eyes are added to the statues, an energy is breathed into the moai and they become the living embodiment of ancestors whose role is to protect us.” Coming from a people whose ancestors were cannibals who is the statue saving the people from, themselves? “The large-scale deforestation led to soil erosion and over a span of several centuries, the island's ability to support wildlife and farming was compromised. People began to starve. In a last ditch effort at survival, they became cannibals.” Next our tiki mugs will be deemed cultural appropriation. |
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JasonMa
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 7:14 AM
Really? That's your take on this very reasonable proposal? SMH. No wonder the Museum thinks it can get away with keeping things like the Moai and the Parthenon Marbles. |
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Sandbartender
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 7:38 AM
We live in an age of wonders. If the museum wanted to they could themselves scan the original and have an exact copy CNC'd or printed, down to the last chisel mark. There really is no excuse to keep a culturally important artifact when the culture it was taken from is asking for it back. Especially when the Rapa Nui Just my $00.02 |
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EnchantedTikiGoth
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 7:56 AM
You talk like that hasn't already happened. Overall, the museum doesn't really have a choice. They're getting a very reasonable proposal that has a feel-good story with it, and if they refuse it they'll look like a-holes. In the museum and heritage field in general, we're in a time where it's not merely ethical but necessary for institutions to work with the people they are representing. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 9:23 AM
Yeah, I don't really care much for some of my close relatives so guess I'm not a family guy. BUT, the statue in a museum helps to promote and tell their story. So do they want the team from wherever, National Geographic? to burry the statues back from where they dug them up after the people, (ancestors of the Easter Island) toppled them back when they were fighting? Just a bit tired of the digging up of every past injustice. Think of all the things taken in war or otherwise and imagine giving it all back. Wonder if France wants that statue they gave us back? |
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JasonMa
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 10:50 AM
Difference being that France willingly gave us the Statue of Liberty. Nobody gave the Moai or the Marbles away, they were taken. If the British had gotten their hands on the Declaration/Bill of Rights/Constitution in 1812 and taken them back to England to put in the Museum you'd probably want them delivered back to the U.S. government wouldn't you? |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 11:21 AM
"If the British had gotten their hands on the Declaration/Bill of Rights/Constitution in 1812 and taken them back to England to put in the Museum you'd probably want them delivered back to the U.S. government wouldn't you?" Well if there were like what How many statues are on Easter Island 50, more? Remember that the digging up and even bringing them back to England helped the Easter Island economy, heck is that the only source of income, tourism I think? I bet the Inca people want their gold back too, that stuff must have been lots of religious stuff too. Damn it was not right but that's what people did back then. I really don't know enough about the history involved here so what do I know. Just the opinion of one person, what do I know. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 11:31 AM
I got a question, If that were the case then there would be LOTS less mugs/menus in all of our collections as many of them were stolen at one time even if not by you the person who has it now. AND I say that is why there are still good condition versions of these mugs as if they did not sell that mug it would have mostly been broken in the bar through usage. |
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Sandbartender
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 11:42 AM
Technically, yes. As the ebay buyer would be in possession of stolen goods. Whether they knew it or not is irrelevant. Although if it were bought "on the level" the buyer can usually just For something small and not terribly valuable, I doubt anyone would bother. Especially for old things like mugs, where a statute of limitation would likely have been LOOOONG past. But for a more relevant example, just look at the art world re: big ticket items getting returned after decades or more because they were stolen from some museum or collection. And in this particular case, the Moai was boosted by the British Navy and gifted to the queen. So whatever the end result was of boosting interest in EI tourism, the motive wasn't all that altruistic. |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 1:02 PM
"the motive wasn't all that altruistic" I did not think it was altruistic, but I think it did promote tourism sparking interest in the statues many years later. Chili does seam to be doing well now economically, I don't think the statues are the reason but Easter Island has made money from them. Wonder when they went from eating each other to doing well economically. |
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JasonMa
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 2:31 PM
You mean like this? |
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MadDogMike
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 3:03 PM
Every ancient artifact in every museum in the world once belonged to another culture, just as every bit of land once belonged to another culture. I can see the Rapa Nui wanting their Moai back and I appreciate that they are willing negotiate for it. But I also see how this could get out of hand. |
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tikitube
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 3:30 PM
Seems to me like their offer to replace it with an exact replica makes this a no-brainer for the museum. Just because it was a common practice to steal cultural artifacts at one point in time doesn't make it right. I remember reading Aku Aku and thinking that Heyerdahl was a bit of an asshole when he kept bragging about tricking the natives into giving him their ancestral carvings, even though I thought Heyerdahl was a pretty cool guy. The real question is this...if the museum refuses and the Easter Islanders were to find a way to steal it back, would they be in the wrong? [ Edited by: tikitube 2018-11-19 15:30 ] |
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Sandbartender
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 3:59 PM
Sounds like the plot of a great movie. Where a crack team of islanders both smuggle copy of an 8 ton statue INTO a museum, and boost the original out- all under the cover of night. :D |
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tikiskip
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 5:17 PM
Great point Mike. In New York where my wife is from they had a treaty that in time the land went back to the Indians well the time came and now people who had a house on that land now pay rent to the Indians and the Indians can at any time say move your house. Can you imagine having your house on land that was not your land? And before you say we took the land from them remember we also took homes from the Japanese in the 50s no less and you never hear about that. |
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JasonMa
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 5:43 PM
Other than the laws passed in 1988 and 1992 providing them restitution, the official apology from the government in 2013, California having a day honoring/remembering what happened since 2011, George Takei having an award-winning one-man stage show about it... |
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Cammo
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Mon, Nov 19, 2018 6:22 PM
"Every ancient artifact in every museum in the world once belonged to another culture... But I also see how this could get out of hand." - MadDogMike This is a really interesting question, mostly because EVERYTHING in a museum is there because it has lasting cultural significance, heck brah, that's why it's there! What if a past government gave or sold a statue to a foreign museum, but the current government wants it back now? What if that original government was a dictator? Or - what if it was a democracy? Is there a right/wrong difference anyway? How do we ever settle the question for future generations, considering the fluidity of statecraft? An enormous amount of objects on display in museums were either originally stolen, slipped out of the countries quietly, or simply wouldn't be there under current laws; Egypt has extremely harsh new laws about removing their antiquities. (Basically, you can't remove them. Don't even try.) Of course, the Egypt of 100 years ago was shoving mummies at tourists. Yeah, and those statues made of gold? |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 12:31 AM
"Other than the laws passed in 1988 and 1992 providing them restitution, the official apology from the government in 2013, California having a day honoring/remembering what happened since 2011, George Takei having an award-winning one-man stage show about it" That is good to hear, Lets say you don't hear about it in Ohio then. |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 3:38 AM
You know drew Barrymore's grandfather had a room with oddities in it and one thing was a shrunken head. Well back in the 20s 30s it was popular to go on safari and one of the souvenirs offered was shrunken heads, like from really people, well ex real people. It was said that you would get the strength of a strong warrior if you had his head, that and the ones with tattoos were very popular. So they went out and got more of the tattooed natives to fill this demand, for heads! Not statues, but real peoples heads! Nobody is asking for those back. I once saw one for sale at a antique store, I think it was real maybe as I have seen a real shrunken head before but I did not buy it as I felt it may have some bad ju ju thinking somebody did take his head after all. So I don't know if a statue is something to lose your head over or not. |
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Phillip Roberts
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 8:18 AM
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MadDogMike
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 9:25 AM
Definitely a complex problem with no easy answers. But we seem to be on a societal pendulum swing to over-correct for past sins, I can see how this could easily go awry. |
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tikiskip
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 9:46 AM
Actually more often then you think. Wow, who knew. |
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Cammo
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 11:03 AM
"Seems to me like their offer to replace it with an exact replica makes this a no-brainer for the museum." -Tikitube I'll throw a wrench in here: The British Museum exchanges the Moai (lifted in 1868) for a copy. The Easter Island Development Commission accepts the Moai. They sell it to a Russian museum for $7,300,000.00 a week later, before it's shipped back. Then they build an all-new State of the Art EADC (Easter Island Development Commission) Visitor Center at the boat dock with the proceeds. Hmmm..... |
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aquarj
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Tue, Nov 20, 2018 6:36 PM
Which ancestors would be honored by the return of the moai? I doubt the current goal is to honor the birdman-era Rapa Nui islanders, who were pretty demonstrative about their REBUKE OF THE MOAI. I thought they INTENTIONALLY toppled or destroyed pretty much all the freestanding moai by the time that one was taken to England. And often face down in a way that broke their necks - it almost looks like they would've gladly ground them into dust too if they could've! Maybe they even had reasons that'd make sense if we knew the whole story, like if the moai were seen as oppressive symbols, as in the long-ears vs. short-ears story. (Maybe not!) So if this restoration movement is not about honoring THOSE birdman-era ancestors, then probably it's about honoring the OTHER earlier ancestors who created and RESPECTED THE MOAI. That makes sense, but let's acknowledge that the island's ancestral heritage didn't necessarily have a uniform outlook. In this case what honors some, might even insult others. Humans are complicated! You know, many of us feel like it's the right thing to save a (tiki) work of art when it's clearly going to be destroyed or cast off by its owners. There is virtue in obtaining an artifact, out of appreciation for its esthetic value, at a time when its stewards would destroy it. I don't know the detailed circumstances when the Brits got it, other than a rough impression that it was AFTER the moai were no longer valued in the island culture. But I suspect it's more complicated than the black and white allegations people relish these days - painting historical events as stealing or whatever. I do think there's something to be said for the fact that the moai was preserved at the British Museum, where many have gotten the chance to appreciate it in a respectful way. And it seems fair to acknowledge that it's been in the museum a long time now and has a history there as well (how long was it on the island in the first place?). But I think one shouldn't discount the moai's origins on Rapa Nui. There's still some beauty in the thought that the moai might return "home" someday. -Randy |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Nov 21, 2018 6:29 AM
Some great points there. If you think about the wars some old Hitler, and some new Taliban, LOTS of old artifacts have been destroyed for all time if you split the location of these items you greatly increase the odds of more of it surviving these types of events and even other ways that these things could be harmed. I would think a museum would be one of the safest places for it to be especially one in England as it would take a very big war event to harm it. Another thing I always think is going on is it's not about the statue, it's not about the "people" wanting it back, But more so the thought of the curators wanting their fifteen minuets of fame or even a lifetime of fame being the force "that did the right thing and brought the Moai back" And their names would be in the history books and right next to the statue telling the story on a plaque. Or even the publicity that all this dust kicking will give them. Hey what about the NOBEL prize! Look at the work we did. Being around professors is where all this jaded talk comes from, I did not make it up. It even still could come from good intentions too. |
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Cammo
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Wed, Nov 21, 2018 10:54 AM
Does the Thor Heyerdahl (Kon-Tiki) Museum in Oslo still have all the carvings he coaxed from the islanders? These ancient small-sized carvings were kept secretly in caves and "polished" regularly using sand. Thor wanted them preserved before they were literally dissolved using the sand rubbed over the detailed stone. Thor sincerely believed these carvings were WAY too important historically to leave on the island - in the hands of the islanders whose "magical" application of sand was pretty dang ill-considered. And keep in mind that Thor's journey, his study of the Moai and protection of the carvings were one of the explosive origins of the whole Tiki movement & serious appreciation and study of South Seas cultures that continues to this day... |
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tikitube
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Wed, Nov 21, 2018 12:28 PM
I'm a big Heyerdahl fan, but his approach at obtaining artifacts doesn't sit well with me. We can try to justify that the ends (preservation and exposure to a larger audience) justifies the means, but ultimately he used their superstitions against them and flat out lied to procure many of the items. He explains it in detail in his books, and while he professed a respect for these people, he also seemed proud of his success at tricking them. |
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Onyx_Noir
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Thu, Nov 22, 2018 1:47 PM
One of my favorite youtube channels just uploaded this, and I thought it was pertinent. Easter Island's request to a museum in France is mentioned starting around the 22:00 mark, although I recommend watching the entire thing. Personally, I can see both sides of the argument, they both have merit. And I'm quite glad that I don't work somewhere that would place me in position to make that final decision, whew! |
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tikitube
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Wed, Dec 12, 2018 7:57 AM
Here's another article that just appeared on my radar. Although it focuses primarily on African artifacts, and is obviously a political play, it could have ramifications on collections of other cultures: |
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tikitube
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Wed, Dec 12, 2018 8:00 AM
Thanks for sharing... I'll check this out when I've got more data! :) |
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JasonMa
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Fri, Mar 29, 2019 9:44 AM
Norway's Kon-Tiki museum to return Easter island artifacts Also mentions the request to the British Museum at the bottom of the article |
Pages: 1 33 replies