Current:Home > MarketsThe Dutch are returning looted artifacts to Indonesia and Sri Lanka. Does it matter? -Streamline Finance
The Dutch are returning looted artifacts to Indonesia and Sri Lanka. Does it matter?
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-06 19:49:20
MANILA, Philippines — Hundreds of priceless, cultural artifacts looted during the Dutch colonization of Indonesia and Sri Lanka are finally on their way home.
In a ceremony Monday at the Museum Volkenkunde in Dutch city of Leiden, 478 cultural objects were handed over to representatives from their home countries hundreds of years after they were taken — sometimes by force.
The items to be sent back to Indonesia include, among others, ancient temple carvings from Java, a traditional Balinese dagger, and jewels from Lombok, Indonesia, taken by Dutch troops following the 1894 massacre of hundreds of local residents on the island.
"We are really delighted. This is a very historic moment for both us, Indonesia, and the Netherlands. And the relationship between the two," said Hilmar Farid, Indonesia's Ministry of Culture director general of cultural heritage, reported the AP. "But I think what we have achieved so far is also a very significant contribution to the global debate about returning of colonial objects."
Added Dewi van de Weerd, the Dutch ambassador for international cooperation over Twitter: "What has been taken, will have to go back, unconditionally."
The artifacts are the first to be returned since the Dutch set up a committee in 2022 to field requests from countries wanting their artifacts returned. However, the Netherlands and Indonesia have had an agreement since 1975 on the restitution of cultural heritage taken during the Dutch colonial period.
"We consider these objects as our missing items in our historical narrative and of course they play different roles symbolically, culturally," Farid said, noting that their return means Indonesia can "reintegrate them into their cultural contexts. And that is, of course, of symbolic importance to us."
Still, while the return of the cultural objects is "great news," just sending them back is not enough, Citra Sasmita, an Indonesian visual artists who resides on Bali, said.
"It's about the mentality, of course," Sasmita told NPR, recounting the first time she went to the Tropen Museum in Amsterdam and became quite shocked and sad at the depictions of her people. "Their white supremacy mentality portrayed Indonesians as uncivilized people. They glorified their cannon... for me, it's important also to counter the cannon."
Even though the Portuguese were the first Europeans to colonize Indonesia, the Southeast Asian archipelago nation of more than 18,000 islands was colonized by the Dutch East India Company in the 1600s. Indonesia passed on to Dutch government control in 1796 and did not achieve independence until 1945 — nearly 350 years later.
Sasmita said now Indonesia has a responsibility to maintain these returned artifacts so that all Indonesians can learn from them. This means building better museum infrastructure and learning how to better preserve antique objects.
"We need to be more careful with these objects," she said.
The return of the artifacts to Indonesia and Sri Lanka is the latest in a move by Western Powers to repatriate items they plundered during colonial times. Just this year, a Berlin museum announced it would return hundreds of human skulls to East Africa, one of their former colonies, and several artifacts were repatriated to Cambodia from the United States.
veryGood! (51)
Related
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Ecuador prosecutor investigating TV studio attack shot dead in his vehicle, attorney general says
- Former Olympic pole vaulter, world champ Shawn Barber dies at 29
- Man on trial for killing young woman whose friends pulled into wrong driveway says ‘my soul is dead’
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Boeing 747 cargo plane makes emergency landing shortly after takeoff at Miami airport
- A stuntman steering a car with his feet loses control, injuring 9 people in northern Italy
- Good girl! Officer enlists a Michigan man’s dog to help rescue him from an icy lake
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Atlanta Opera will update Puccini’s ‘La Bohéme’ for the coronavirus pandemic
Ranking
- IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
- Wayfair cuts 13% of employees after CEO says it went overboard in hiring
- Midwife who gave 1,500 kids homeopathic pellets instead of vaccines put lives in jeopardy, New York health officials say
- Two young children die in Missouri house explosion; two adults escape serious injury
- Your Wedding Guests Will Thank You if You Get Married at These All-Inclusive Resorts
- Mexican president calls on civilians not to support drug cartels despite any pressure
- Snubbed by Netanyahu, Red Cross toes fine line trying to help civilians in Israel-Hamas conflict
- Prosecutor seeks kidnapping charges in case of missing Indiana teens
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Many animals seized from troubled Virginia zoo will not be returned, judge rules
Selena Gomez to reunite with 'Waverly Place' co-star David Henrie in new Disney reboot pilot
Man sentenced to life plus 30 years in 2018 California spa bombing that killed his ex-girlfriend
$1 Frostys: Wendy's celebrates end of summer with sweet deal
Jack Burke Jr., Hall of Famer who was the oldest living Masters champion, has died at age 100
After domestic abuse ends, the effects of brain injuries can persist
Japan’s imperial family hosts a poetry reading with a focus on peace to welcome the new year