Dr Longkumer on the return of the Naga ancestral remains to their rightful home in Nagaland

Press/Media: Expert Comment

Period25 Sept 2022

Media contributions

1

Media contributions

  • TitleWhy are Naga remains in a UK museum?
    Media name/outletSuno India
    Media typeWeb
    Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
    Date25/09/22
    DescriptionThe Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford, England, has the largest collection of Naga material culture in the world (around 6466 items), including the human remains of Naga ancestors. Anthropologists Dolly Kikon and Arkotong Longkumer have been working as part of a community-led initiative to ensure the return of the Naga ancestral remains to their rightful home in Nagaland. Through this project, Dolly and Arkotong say they are discovering how Indian mainland scholars have also used and abused Naga ancestral remains in similar ways and that some Indian museums continue to store them.

    In this episode of The Suno India Show, host Suryatapa Mukherjee spoke to Dolly and Arkotong to learn more about this path-breaking work. This is the first time that repatriation of ancestral human remains have been initiated in India and even Asia, for indigenous people. Dolly Kikon is a Senior Lecturer in the Anthropology and Development Studies Program at Melbourne University, and a Senior Research Associate at the Australia India Institute. Arkotong Longkumer is Senior Lecturer in Modern Asia at the University of Edinburgh, and Senior Research Fellow at the Kohima Institute in Nagaland.
    PersonsArkotong Longkumer, Dolly Kikon