Indigenous artifacts

Vatican Returns Indigenous Artifacts to Canada: A Complex Repatriation

The Vatican is returning 62 Indigenous cultural objects, including a century-old Inuvialuit kayak, to Canada after Pope Leo XIV gifted them to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. These items, collected from First Nations, Métis, and Inuit communities, were originally sent to Rome for a 1925 exhibition and have been stored in the Vatican Museums. This decision follows Pope Francis’s 2022 visit to Canada and his acknowledgement of the importance of restitution. The artifacts will be transferred to the National Indigenous Organizations to be returned to their communities of origin.

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Pope Returns Artifacts to Canada: Colonial Past Reckoning Continues

The Vatican has returned 62 artifacts to Indigenous peoples from Canada, including an Inuit kayak, as part of its efforts to address the Catholic Church’s role in suppressing Indigenous culture. These items, previously held in the Vatican Museum’s ethnographic collection, were given to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops for distribution to individual Indigenous communities. The return of these artifacts follows Pope Francis’s 2022 meeting with Indigenous leaders and his support for the repatriation of items, and comes 100 years after the items were first exhibited in Rome. This act is seen as a significant step toward reconciliation, with the artifacts expected to be taken to the Canadian Museum of History for identification and proper handling.

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