Current:Home > reviewsEfforts to return remains, artifacts to US tribes get $3 million in funding -Elevate Capital Network
Efforts to return remains, artifacts to US tribes get $3 million in funding
View
Date:2025-04-23 15:16:26
More than 30 tribes, museums and academic institutions across the country will receive a combined $3 million in grants from the National Park Service to assist repatriation efforts.
The grants are being made as part of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, commonly known as NAGPRA, and will fund repatriation of ancestral remains and cultural items, in addition to consultation and documentation efforts.
Enacted in 1990, NAGPRA mandates federally funded museums, academic institutions and federal agencies to inventory and identity Native American human remains – including skeletons, bones and cremains – and cultural items in their collections and to consult with Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations.
It also gives the Secretary of the Interior power to award grants facilitating respectful return of ancestors and objects to their descendant communities, projects administered by the National Park Service.
“The National Park Service is committed to supporting these important efforts to reconnect and return the remains of Tribal ancestors and other cultural resources to the communities they belong to,” park service director Chuck Sams said in a news release announcing the awards. “These grants help ensure Native American cultural heritage isn’t kept in storage, cast aside or forgotten.”
Jenny Davis, an associate professor of anthropology and American Indian studies at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, described the funding as “absolutely critical” to repatriation efforts.
Davis, co-director of the school’s Center for Indigenous Science, said that while the grant amounts may seem minimal given the scope of work necessary, they are essential.
“These grants often represent the majority if not the entirety of NAGPRA compliance budgets, especially at smaller institutions,” she said. “Without them, we would be even farther behind.”
Grants will aid compliance with new regulations
The funding looms even more important given new NAGPRA regulations and deadlines passed into law late last year, Davis said.
The Biden administration updated the law in December, requiring institutions displaying human remains and cultural items to obtain tribal consent. The new regulations took effect in January, sending museums nationwide scrambling to conceal or remove exhibits as they tried to comply.
The update was intended to speed up repatriation efforts, long lamented for their sluggish pace.
Two tribes and three museums will receive grants to fund the transportation and return of human remains of 137 ancestors, 12 funerary objects and 54 cultural items.
The Chickasaw Nation’s reburial team, for example, will travel to Moundville, Alabama, to finish a repatriation project retrieving 130 ancestors from the Tennessee Valley Authority for reinternment.
Another 11 tribes and 19 museums will receive grants for consultation and documentation projects supporting repatriation efforts, such as those of Wisconsin’s Forest County Potawatomi Community, descendants of a tribal group covering parts of Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio. The funds will help the community catalog human remains and associated items for possible repatriation.
Among the other grant recipients are Oklahoma’s Comanche Nation and Pawnee Nation, Oregon’s Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Reservation, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the Museum of Northern Arizona and the University of South Carolina.
USAT Network reporter Grace Tucker contributed to this article.
veryGood! (8974)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Proof Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Are Closer Than Ever After Kansas City Chiefs Win
- A Georgia fire battalion chief is killed battling a tractor-trailer blaze
- Utah woman killed her 3 children, herself in vehicle, officials say
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Judge delays Donald Trump’s sentencing in hush money case until after November election
- The former Uvalde schools police chief asks a judge to throw out the charges against him
- Redefine Maternity Style With the Trendy and Comfortable Momcozy Belly Band
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Hey, politicians, stop texting me: How to get the candidate messages to end
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- The Chiefs got lucky against the Ravens. They still look like champions.
- Tzuyu of TWICE on her debut solo album: 'I wanted to showcase my bold side'
- Connecticut pastor elected president of nation’s largest Black Protestant denomination
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Cheeseheads in Brazil: Feeling connected to the Packers as Sao Paulo hosts game
- Bull that escaped from Illinois farm lassoed after hours on the run
- A man who attacked a Nevada judge in court pleads guilty but mentally ill
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Space crash: New research suggests huge asteroid shifted Jupiter's moon Ganymede on its axis
Judge considers bumping abortion-rights measure off Missouri ballot
Taylor Swift Leaves No Blank Spaces in Her Reaction to Travis Kelce’s Team Win
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Utah woman killed her 3 children, herself in vehicle, officials say
Residents are ready to appeal after a Georgia railroad company got approval to forcibly buy land
Woman who fell trying to escape supermarket shooting prayed as people rushed past to escape