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British Columbia

Scottish museum returning stolen totem pole after visit from Nisga'a Nation

The pole was hand-carved in the 1800s and stolen by a researcher in 1929, the Nisga'a say.

Nisga'a say pole was hand-carved in the 1800s and stolen by a researcher in 1929

A man wearing Indigenous regalia touches a giant totem pole.
Sim'oogit Ni'isjoohl (Earl Stephens) of the Nisga'a Nation with the Ni'isjoohl memorial pole. (Neil Hanna/National Museums Scotland)

The National Museum of Scotland says it will return a memorial totem pole taken nearly a century ago from the Nisga'a Nation in British Columbia.

The museum says its board of trustees approved the First Nation's request to transfer the poleto its home in northwest B.C.

A delegation of Nisga'a leaders travelled to Edinburgh last August to request the transfer of the 11-metre pole back to their territory.

Nisga'a Nation Chief Earl Stephens says in a statement their people believe the pole, which was hand-carved in the mid-1800s, is alive with the spirit of an ancestor, and it's now coming home to rest.

'A living constitutional and visual archive'

The Ni'isjoohl memorial pole is "a living constitutional and visual archive," said Noxs Ts'aawit (Dr. AmyParent), a Canada research chair in Indigenous education and governance at Simon Fraser University and part of the delegation that visited Scotland earlier this year.

"So to have it removed is like having someone rip out a chapter of Canada's constitution and your most treasured family photo album and place it in a museum in another country to be viewed by foreigners on a daily basis," she said.

A Nisga'a delegation led by Sim'oogit Ni'isjoohl (Earl Stephens) and Sigidimnak Nox Ts'aawit (Amy Parent) at the National Museum of Scotland in August. (Neil Hanna/National Museum of Scotland)

The First Nation in northwesternBritish Columbiasays colonial ethnographer Marius Barbeau stole the pole in 1929 and later sold it to the National Museum of Scotland.

The Ni'isjoohl memorial poleis a house pole that was carved and erected in the 1860s. It tells the story of Ts'wawit, a warrior who was nextin line to be chief before he was killed in a conflict with a neighbouring nation.

In a statementreleased earlier this year,the Nisga'a said the pole"represents a chapter of the Peoples' cultural sovereigntyand is a living constitutional and visual record."

It said Barbeau took the pole without the consent of the House of Ni'isjoohlone of around 50 houses within the Nisga'a Nation during a period when theNisga'a Peoples were away from their villages for the annual hunting, fishingand harvesting season.

Chris Breward, the director of National Museums Scotland, says in a statement the institution is pleased to reach an agreement allowing the pole to be transferred to its people and the place where its spiritual significance is most keenly understood.

With files from Kate Partridge