麻豆视频

Cornell repatriates ancestral remains to Oneida Indian Nation

With apologies for causing harm and in an effort to right the wrongs of the past, Cornell returned ancestral remains and possessions that had been kept in a university archive for six decades to the Oneida Indian Nation on Feb. 21 at a small campus ceremony.

The remains were unearthed in 1964 as property owners dug a ditch for a new water line on their farm near Windsor, New York. Law enforcement authorities brought the remains to a Cornell anthropology professor, who carried out forensic identification for age and sex. The remains were then stored in a campus archive until after the professor鈥檚 death 鈥 only to be rediscovered by younger colleagues during an archival inventory.

鈥淭oday we鈥檙e marking an event that is both long overdue and never should have become necessary,鈥 said President Martha E. Pollack, speaking at the Sage Chapel ceremony, where faculty, students, staff and Oneida Indian Nation guests gathered. 鈥淲e鈥檙e returning ancestral remains and possessions that we now recognize never should have been taken; never should have come to Cornell; and never should have been kept here.

 

鈥淲e are here to try 鈥 as far as we are able 鈥 to right those wrongs,鈥 Pollack said. 鈥淚n doing so, we take responsibility for them and we grieve the harm they have caused.鈥

Ray Halbritter, Oneida Indian Nation representative, said that the individuals will be laid to rest in the tradition of their people. 鈥淲e are finally able to speak to them in Onyota鈥檃:ka虂:, the Oneida language 鈥 the language they would have spoken during their lifetimes,鈥 he said.

鈥淭he return of our ancestors to our sacred homelands is a basic human right,鈥 Halbritter said. 鈥淲e commend Cornell University for working with the Oneida Indian Nation to right this wrong. The repatriation of our ancestors鈥 remains enables us to honor their lives and honor the ways that our people have lived by since time immemorial.

鈥淓ach time the remains of our ancestors and our cultural artifacts are returned to us in this way, we take another step forward in a long journey toward recognition of our sovereignty as a nation and our dignity as people,鈥 he said.

At the ceremony鈥檚 end, Pollack and Halbritter each signed transfer documents.

Funerary objects that were interred with the ancestors will be restored to the Oneida people as well.

The event included traditional Oneida ceremonial words delivered by Dean Lyons, an Oneida Nation Turtle Clan member. Lyons was introduced by Joel M. Malina, vice president for university relations, who opened the ceremony with the acknowledgement that Cornell is located on .

鈥淣early sixty years ago, these ancestors were taken from the place their families chose for them,鈥 Pollack said. 鈥淲ithout regard for the wishes of their descendants, they were taken to Cornell and remained here for decades 鈥 unidentified, alone and far from the places and people among whom they belonged.

鈥淭oday, I want to apologize, on behalf of the university and all who were involved in these wrongs, for the disrespect shown to these ancestors,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd for the hurt that has added more pain to the tragedy of Indigenous dispossession.鈥

The ancestral remains came into the possession of the late anthropology professor Kenneth A.R. Kennedy in 1964 鈥&苍产蝉辫;a quarter of a century before the passage of the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990. This law provides a formal process for institutions to repatriate cultural items or ancestral remains to either lineal descendants or tribes.

鈥淭o say that Professor Kennedy鈥檚 actions were utterly commonplace among his contemporaries is not to excuse them,鈥 said Matthew Velasco, assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology, in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, speaking at the ceremony. 鈥淥n the contrary, they reveal the mundanity and pervasiveness of Indigenous dispossession.鈥

Velasco, as an educator and researcher, explained that he is an inheritor of this legacy: 鈥淥ur efforts to help bring the ancestors home cannot erase the harm done,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut I hope this serves as a sign of our remorse, our respect for the Oneida Indian Nation and our resolve to do better.鈥

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Two people sign a document on a podium
Jason Koski/Cornell University Ray Halbritter, left, representing the Oneida Indian Nation, and President Martha E. Pollack, sign documents that repatriate ancestral remains from the university to the Oneida Indian Nation.