Organikos posted: " The legitimacy of museums possessing artifacts from other cultures is not inherently dubious, but as the Parthenon marbles example has demonstrated, there are plenty of reasonable questions. This story about a museums to the right side of history is w" Organikos
Earl Stephens, who goes by the Nisga'a cultural name Chief Ni'is Joohl, center left, and members of a delegation from the Nisga'a nation pose beside a 36-foot tall memorial pole during a visit to the National Museum of Scotland on Monday. Andrew Milligan/Press Association, via Associated Press
The 36-foot tall memorial pole has spent almost a century in a Scottish museum. Now it will be returned to the Nisga'a Nation in Canada.
Almost 100 years ago, a hand-carved totem pole was cut down in the Nass Valley in the northwest of Canada's British Columbia.
The 36-foot tall pole had been carved from red cedar in the 1860s to honor Ts'wawit, a warrior from the Indigenous Nisga'a Nation, who was next in line to become chief before he was killed in conflict.
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