At new Museum of Black Civilizations, a call to come home

There is a growing demand in Africa that pieces of cherished heritage taken from the continent over the centuries of colonisation be returned

December 26, 2018 09:33 pm | Updated 09:38 pm IST - Dakar

Welcoming spaces:  The Museum of Black Civilizations is seen during the inauguration in Dakar, Senegal on December 20.

Welcoming spaces: The Museum of Black Civilizations is seen during the inauguration in Dakar, Senegal on December 20.

The Museum of Black Civilizations in Senegal opened this month amid a global conversation about the ownership and legacy of African art.

The West African nation’s Culture Minister isn’t shy — he wants the thousands of pieces of cherished heritage taken from the continent over the centuries to come home.

“It’s entirely logical that Africans should get back their artworks,” Abdou Latif Coulibaly told . “These works were taken in conditions that were perhaps legitimate at the time but illegitimate today.”

Last month, a report commissioned by French President Emmanuel Macron recommended that French museums give back works taken without consent, if African countries request them. Mr. Macron has stressed the “undeniable crimes of European colonization,” adding that “I cannot accept that a large part of African heritage is in France.”

The new museum in Dakar is the latest sign that welcoming spaces across the continent are being prepared.

Decades in making

The museum, with its focus on Africa and the diaspora, is decades in the making. The idea was conceived when Senegal’s first President, internationally acclaimed poet Leopold Sedar Senghor, hosted the World Black Festival of Arts in 1966.

At the museum’s vibrant opening, sculptors from Los Angeles, singers from Cameroon and professors from Europe and the Americas came to celebrate, some in tears. “This moment is historic,” Senegalese President Macky Sall said. “It is part of the continuity of history.”

Perhaps reflecting the tenuous hold that African nations still have on their own legacy objects, the museum will not have a permanent collection. Filling the 1,48,000-square-foot circular structure, one of the largest of its kind on the continent, is complicated by the fact that countless artefacts have been dispersed around the world.

Both the inaugural exhibition, “African Civilizations — Continuous Creation of Humanity,” and the museum’s curator take a far longer view than the recent centuries of colonisation and turmoil. Current works highlight the continent as the “cradle of civilization” and the echoes found among millions of people in the diaspora today. “Colonisation? That’s just two centuries,” curator Hamady Bocoum said, adding that proof of African civilisation is at least 7,000 years old, referencing a skull discovered in present-day Chad.

Like others, Mr. Bocoum is eager to see artefacts return for good. The exhibition includes 50 pieces on loan from France, including more than a dozen from the Quai Branly museum in Paris.

More than 5,000 pieces in the Quai Branly come from Senegal alone, Mr. Bocoum said.

Triumph and tragedy

“When we see the inventory of the Senegalese objects that are found in France, we’re going to ask for certain of those objects,” Mr. Bocoum said. “For the moment, we have not yet started negotiations.”

The history of some of the objects in the opening exhibition is grim. Pointing to the saber of El Hadj Umar Tall, a 19th-century West African thinker who fought against French colonialism, Mr. Bocoum described how French troops fighting him stripped local women of their elaborate jewellery by cutting off their ears.

Contemporary works in the exhibition touch on both triumph and tragedy. There are black-and-white photographs of African nightclubs in the 1960s shot by famous Malian photographer Malick Sidibe, and a stark mural by Haitian artist Philippe Dodard depicting African religions and the middle passage.

Works by Yrneh Gabon Brown, based in Los Angeles, reference slavery and contemporary race relations in America.

“Sometimes I feel like a motherless child,” Mr. Brown said. “And here, as a member of Africa’s English-speaking diaspora, I am proud, reaffirmed.”

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