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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBelgium Is Returning 2,000 Artifacts Looted From Congo - Just 118,000 Left
The government still claims the majority of its collection was obtained legitimately. HOW????
The Belgian government has announced plans to repatriate around 2,000 artefacts looted during the colonial era a figure that represents under two percent of the countrys collection of artwork that originated from Africa.
The countrys Royal Museum of Central Africa in Tervuren, a municipality just outside of Brussels, holds around 120,000 items, the majority of which originated from an area of central Africa now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
King Leopold II ruled over the Congo Free State five times the size of Belgium at the end of the 19th century, running it as his personal fiefdom. He enslaved millions of people and put them to work extracting rubber from vines to feed the growing global tyre industry. An estimated 10 million people, roughly half the population, were killed during his 20-year reign.
The decision to return at least some of the countrys stolen artefacts comes after Belgiums science minister, Thomas Dermine, recently declared that any items that can be proven to have been plundered, dont belong to us.
Instead of a piecemeal approach by artwork, we said lets adopt a more radical and holistic approach, Dermine said in a statement. Everything that has been acquired through force and violence under illegitimate conditions must in principle be returned. Objects that have been acquired in an illegitimate fashion by our ancestors, by our grandparents, great-grandparents, do not belong to us. They belong to the Congolese people. Full stop. Cultural heritage is one of the riches exploited by the colonial powers, and taking thousands of objects from colonies deprives the citizens of the former colony of access to their own history, culture, creativity and spirituality of their ancestors.
SNIP
There has clearly been a generational shift in Belgium and the new generation has a different relationship with Africa.
That generational shift was centre stage last summer as tens of thousands of predominantly young people took to the streets of cities across Belgium to demand their government take responsibility for their colonial legacy. The the largest of which attracted 15,000 people to Brussels were sparked by Black Lives Matter demonstrations that spread throughout the world. Statues of King Leopold II were taken down across the country, while large swathes of Belgian infrastructure that was dedicated to Leopold was renamed.
The countrys Royal Museum of Central Africa in Tervuren, a municipality just outside of Brussels, holds around 120,000 items, the majority of which originated from an area of central Africa now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
King Leopold II ruled over the Congo Free State five times the size of Belgium at the end of the 19th century, running it as his personal fiefdom. He enslaved millions of people and put them to work extracting rubber from vines to feed the growing global tyre industry. An estimated 10 million people, roughly half the population, were killed during his 20-year reign.
The decision to return at least some of the countrys stolen artefacts comes after Belgiums science minister, Thomas Dermine, recently declared that any items that can be proven to have been plundered, dont belong to us.
Instead of a piecemeal approach by artwork, we said lets adopt a more radical and holistic approach, Dermine said in a statement. Everything that has been acquired through force and violence under illegitimate conditions must in principle be returned. Objects that have been acquired in an illegitimate fashion by our ancestors, by our grandparents, great-grandparents, do not belong to us. They belong to the Congolese people. Full stop. Cultural heritage is one of the riches exploited by the colonial powers, and taking thousands of objects from colonies deprives the citizens of the former colony of access to their own history, culture, creativity and spirituality of their ancestors.
SNIP
There has clearly been a generational shift in Belgium and the new generation has a different relationship with Africa.
That generational shift was centre stage last summer as tens of thousands of predominantly young people took to the streets of cities across Belgium to demand their government take responsibility for their colonial legacy. The the largest of which attracted 15,000 people to Brussels were sparked by Black Lives Matter demonstrations that spread throughout the world. Statues of King Leopold II were taken down across the country, while large swathes of Belgian infrastructure that was dedicated to Leopold was renamed.
Will plant one of my favorite scenes from Black Panther here
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Belgium Is Returning 2,000 Artifacts Looted From Congo - Just 118,000 Left (Original Post)
tulipsandroses
Jul 2021
OP
malaise
(269,157 posts)1. Monsters all
who enriched themselves
crickets
(25,983 posts)2. K&R for visibility.