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The scramble for Africa’s treasures

Found in the African newspaper Next,  March 22, 2010

The history of the African continent is littered with the exploits of plunderers. Slave traders - local and foreign - held sway for centuries, carting multitudes of Africans across the Atlantic, to plantations in the Americas and elsewhere. When the slave trade went out of fashion, the land grab followed. In Berlin in 1885, the colonial warriors carved Africa up into bits - represented on the map as brightly coloured slices - which they then proceeded to administer and exploit, until the wave of independence that arrived with the 1950s. Following that phase, the scramble has largely taken on an economic dimension, with Africa’s oil and minerals and farmlands up for grabs.

Less overt, is another kind of plunder - involving the relocation of hundreds of valuable pieces of artwork - sculptures, pottery, from Africa to museums and private collections in the West. Take Benin’s bronze heads for example. In 1897, the British attacked and destroyed the Benin Kingdom. In the process they gained access to the Kingdom’s rich trove of extraordinary artwork, which they wasted no time looting. And the plunder has continued to the present day. Over the last few decades, hundreds of vigango (ancestral totems used to mark burial sites) have disappeared from Kenyan villages, ending up in museums and private collections in the United States. In 1994, the National Museum in Ile-Ife was broken into three times, with the vandals carting away some of the finest heads in the collection.

It is estimated that the global illicit trade in artifacts is currently worth billions of dollars. It would also not be farfetched to say that the West’s thriving exhibition circuit is propped up to a significant extent by artifacts illegally acquired from Africa. An exhibition, currently going on in London at the moment, is showing the finest of Ife’s terracotta and brass heads. At the moment, there are no plans to host the exhibition in Nigeria.

It would not be true, or fair, however, to lay the blame solely at the feet of Europe and America. The West would find it extremely difficult to gain possession of African artifacts, especially in contemporary times, without the collusion of Africans themselves, within and outside the government bureaucracy. Unscrupulous Western businessmen and art dealers may pay for Kenya’s vigango, but the actual stealing is done by unscrupulous Kenyan youth, who loot burial sites. In 2001, Chinedu Idezuna, a Lagos-based artifacts dealer with a thriving export business told Time Magazine: “Customs officials check the shipment for narcotics, for this and that, but because I’ve got the letter, I’m fine. Our government doesn’t permit it, of course, but we gallery owners get [objects] out by telling [customs officials] that we are having a show of African culture.” The “letter” he was referring to, according to Time, was “from the N.C.M.M. (National Commission for Museums and Monuments), permitting him to export contemporary arts and crafts - but not antiquities.”

Conspiracies like this abound at all levels of government bureaucracy. The truth is that there are few incentives for African art to stay on the African continent. The museums that should house them are grossly under funded, in many cases neglected outright. Pay a visit to the National Museum in Lagos, to see the dismal treatment meted out to valuable, irreplaceable antiquities. A few minutes in the museum is all it will take to convince anyone that the most valuable parts of our history lie buried beneath dust and darkness.

Beyond institutional disdain, there is the role of religion in making African art an endangered species. Christianity and Islam, in their vicious campaign against “idolatry” have succeeded in destroying several historic sites and artwork. In June 2008 violence broke out in Osogbo, Osun State, between Muslims and the followers of a popular masquerade. The masquerade was beaten and stripped and his clothing taken away by the Muslims. Communal shrines in many parts of Eastern Nigeria have for years been under siege from zealous Christians acting in the belief that the shrines are pagan and the source of misfortune and affliction.

Because of the reasons outlined above, there are many who have come to the conclusion that African artifacts are actually better off in the care of the West, where there is a better guarantee that they will be preserved and kept secure and even properly researched. On the surface of it this argument appears to make a lot of sense. But in truth what it does is to let out governments off lightly from their responsibility to treat our cultural heritage with respect.

We urge Nigerian governments at all levels to emulate the Osun State Government, whose efforts resulted in the listing of the Osun Osogbo grove as a UNESCO world heritage site. We also appeal to wealthy Nigerians to extend their philanthropic efforts towards preserving our cultural heritage. There are museums and private collections waiting to be built and funded, research chairs to be funded in Universities. After all, the intimidating stash of African Art currently in the collection of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art once belonged to the private collection of American politician and philanthropist, Nelson Rockefeller. Our billionaires already have their work cut out for them.


Next Reader Comments :

Posted by SoCal on Mar 22 2010

I had a splendid time at Osun Osogbo grove three weeks ago during my yearly vacation trip to Nigeria. The road trip from Ile-Ife to my home town, Ondo was full of splendor with the palm trees standing tall to the sky and competing with the mountains. Beautiful forest and landscape. Preservation is the key to promote our cultural heritage. Nigerians billionaires are too selfish to preserve the culture. Thank you, NEXT.

Posted by SoCal on Mar 22 2010

I had a splendid time at Osun Osogbo grove three weeks ago during my yearly vacation trip to Nigeria. The road trip from Ile-Ife to my home town, Ondo was full of splendor with the palm trees standing tall to the sky and competing with the mountains. Beautiful forest and landscape. Preservation is the key to promote our cultural heritage. Nigerians billionaires are too selfish to preserve the culture. Thank you, NEXT.

Posted by Area Boy on Mar 22 2010

una don move unesco from obasanjo library?

Posted by Isaac Akins on Mar 22 2010

who told nextd that it was the efforts of the osun state government that resulted in the listing of osun osogbo grove as unesco world heritage site?

Posted by King on Mar 22 2010

Its a pity. The vicious campaign of colonial/invaders religions against perceived 'idolatory' has led to disdains for our own values. Everthing and anything indigenous is considered paganist. I tell you, with this rate, there will come a time that to bear your native name will be considered demonic. Really it is from one phase of slavery to another. What with the churches coloring any incidental unpleasant happening in your life as 'generational curse', meaning you shd disassociate with your roots, giving room for smart hoodwinkers.

Posted by habu on Mar 22 2010

Wheather Africans can maintain the treasures or not does that give the westerners rights to steal? At least we know xtianity is the cause of the reasons Africa is in such shamble state. Thank to islam and xtianity for their trouble souls in Africa. These religions are designed to hold Africans for the Arabs/westerners' future, while Africans cannot help themselves for themselves, but themselves for Arab/westerners.

Posted by Uche on Mar 22 2010

Unfortunately, the greedy western thieves still see Africa as theirs.They never want Africa to progress to justify their looting of the continent. Start from their media, it is as if they have sworn to always report Africa as a jungle where humans are no different from monkeys. No wonder, a white friend asked me is it through that in the streets of Africa, men and monkeys compete for food. I told him, he is uneducated. He asked me why? I told him in this age of global village, even if you were told of something, why dont you verify? Africa is not a village neither is it a country. It is the second largest continent on earth with a population of over 1 billion people. I dont blame him, you watch BBC, Skeynews, CNN, France24, RTP etc, will understand why westerners can never see anything good in Africa. Even Asians see themselves as superior to Africans, I mean even black Asians that otherwise are known as aborigines do not want to be seen as black people despite the fact that physically, no difference between them and Africans.

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