Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon March 13, 2019 Ancestors: team returning from New Zealand (Continued from page 1) Some of the grave rob- bers were in search of funerary objects. And some were looking for the remains themselves, in order to sell or otherwise add them to a mu- seum collection. The Yale Peabody Mu- seum in Connecticut received many Wasco remains, identi- fiable by the shape of the cranium. Ms. Kirk then ex- plains: At some point in the 1880s the Peabody Museum appar- ently exchanged some of its Wasco remains and objects with the Canterbury Museum in New Zealand, in exchange for Mâori remains and ob- jects. The looting, selling and trading of Native American remains was not unusual at the time. On the contrary, estimates at time of NAGPRA were that half a million Native American re- mains were held by museums in the U.S. alone. More than 100,000— along with a million funerary objects—could not be asso- ciated with any specific tribe or tribes. Under NAGPRA many of those that could be identi- fied have been returned for repatriation to tribes, includ- ing to the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. The remains from the Can- terbury Museum will be the first the tribes have received from a museum in a foreign country. Ms. Kirk details how the repatriation came about: “Back in 1996 an artist friend was traveling in New Zealand, and while there he went to the Canterbury Mu- seum,” becoming aware of the Columbia River ancestral remains. “The tribe he first alerted was the Umatilla, and they got the ball rolling,” Roberta says. “We heard about it and wanted to be involved. And we started a conversation with the Canterbury Mu- seum.” Evidence at the museum was that the remains were from The Dalles area, and could therefore be Wasco. This belief was strengthened by observing the distinctive Courtesy Roberta Kirk The Columbia River Tribes repatriation team: From Warm Springs are Tashina Eastman (back row third from left), Roberta Kirk (back row second from right), and Rosie Johnson ( seated at the left). They are joined by members of the Yakama, Umatilla and Mâori. Gofundme account, helping cover some of the costs. The team left for New Zealand last Saturday, and will return this week, with the repatriation ceremony set for this Saturday, March 16. The Warm Springs Se- niors program is taking sign- ups for elders who wish to attend the ceremony. The Courtesy David Walker/Stuff Canterbury Museum held a ceremony to return three ancestral skulls of First Nations people on Monday. shape of the craniums, in- dicating a ‘flathead’ or Wasco royalty lineage. The tribes contacted the Canterbury Museum to see if they could ship the re- mains back to the tribes. The museum board, though, said they would prefer a more significant and formal transfer ceremony, involving the Mâori. The U.S. National Parks Service was not able to help the tribes with travel ex- penses—as it with cases un- der NAGPRA—because the Canterbury Museum is out- side of the jurisdiction. Instead, the tribal team raised donations. The Con- federated Tribes of Warm Springs, the Credit Enter- prise, Indian Head Casino, Power and Water, GeoVisions and Ventures chipped in for the Warm Springs team, which in- cludes Roberta, Rosie Johnson and Tashina Eastman. Co-workers and the community helped. And Roberta set up a Courtesy David Walker/Stuff Aaron Ashley from the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation was ‘overwhelmed’ with emotion during the ceremony on Monday. Second repatriation from Canterbury Museum The tribes and the Can- terbury Museum believe the remains were poten- tially sold to the museum by Professor Henry Ward in the early 1900s. Ward was an American scientist, explorer and museum builder. He travelled the globe trading, purchasing and amassing a huge collec- tion of fossils and other objects for his collections. On Easter Island This is the second time Canterbury Museum has re- turned ancestral remains to another country. In 2018, remains were returned to the Rapa Nui—the aborigi- nal Polynesian inhabitants of Easter Island. Delay by earthquake The Canterbury Mu- seum director and staff are pleased the Wasco re- mains are finally being returned to the ancestral homelands. Part of the delay in the process was due to a powerful earth- quake that struck Christchurch in 2011. Seniors Program will pro- vide bus transportation. Three of the Mâori people are planning to at- tend. A tribal meal at the Celilo Longhouse will follow the re-burial. The Confed- erated Tribes provided salmon, deer meat and roots. Interestingly, the Mâori are long-time friends of the tribes. They have visited Warm Springs on a number of occasions. The Mâori and Warm Springs share similar cultural traditions, such as unique basketry and traditional dance. It was by fortunate chance that the Mâori are the tribe to assist with the repatriation. Dave McMechan