France returns slain king's skull to Madagascar
Hugh
Schofield///
The head of a Malagasy king killed by French troops during a colonial-era war has been formally returned to Madagascar.
The handover of King Toera's skull - and those of two other members of
his court - took place at a ceremony at the culture ministry in Paris.
The skulls had been brought to France at the end of the 19th Century
and stored at the Museum of Natural History in the French capital.
It is the first use of a new law meant to expedite the return of human
remains from collections in France.
"These
skulls entered the national collections in circumstances that clearly violated
human dignity and in a context of colonial violence," French Culture
Minister Rachida Dati is quoted by the AFP agency as saying at the ceremony.
In
August 1897, a French force sent to assert colonial control over the Menabé
kingdom of the Sakalava people in western Madagascar massacred a local army.
King
Toera was killed and decapitated: his head sent to Paris where it was placed in
the archives of the Museum of Natural History.
Nearly
130 years later pressure from the king's descendants as well as the government
of the Indian Ocean nation has opened the way for the skull's return.
There
is no DNA proof that the skull is King Toera's - tests carried out several
years ago were inconclusive. Ultimately it was a traditional Sakalava spirit
medium who confirmed the skull was that of the monarch.
Madagascar's
Culture Minister Volamiranty Donna Mara, who also gave a speech at the
handover, said the return of skulls was a "significant gesture", AFP
reports.
"Their
absence has been, for more than a century... an open wound in the heart of our
island," she said.
It
is not the first time human remains from the colonial era have been given back
by France.
Most
famous was the South African woman cruelly nicknamed the "Hottentot
Venus" who had once been put on display in Europe and whose body was taken home in 2002.
But
this is the first return under a recent law which makes the process much
easier.
It
is estimated that at the Museum of Natural History alone there are more than
20,000 human remains brought to France from around the world for supposedly
scientific reasons.
SOURCE:BBC IN PARIS
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