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16 NARF Legal Rev. 1 (1990-1991)

handle is hein.journals/narf16 and id is 1 raw text is: 


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Native American Rights Fund

  Repatriation Act Protects Native Burial Remains and Artifacts


Introduction

    The Smithsonian Institution is often fondly
 referred to as the nation's attic. While this
 description seems benign and generally positive,
 a more sinister aspect clouds that appellation for
 Indian people. Recently, Indians learned that the
 national attic holds the single largest collection
 of Native American human remains in the
 United States.
   This fact was first brought to light in the sum-
 mer of 1986, when a number of Northern
 Cheyenne chiefs visited Washington D.C.
 During the course of their visit they arranged to
 tour the Smithsonian Institution's Cheyenne col-
 lection at the National Museum of Natural His-
 tory. As we were walking out, a Northern
 Cheyenne woman who worked on Capitol Hill
 later recalled, we saw [the] huge ceilings in the
 room, with row upon row of drawers. Someone
 remarked that there must be a lot of Indian stuff
 in those drawers. Quite casually, a curator with
 us said, Oh, this is where we keep the skeletal
 remains, and he told us how many -- 18,500.
 Everyone was shocked. 1
    This discovery by a small group of visiting
Northern Cheyenne chiefs helped generate a na-
tional Indian movement that eventually resulted
in the enactment of Public Law 101-601, the
Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). This law con-
tains several significant provisions. First, it re-
quires that federal agencies and private museums
which receive federal funding must inventory


their collections of Native American human
remains and associated funerary objects. Where
known, the tribe of origin must then be notified
and, upon request of the tribe, the ancestral
remains and funerary objects must be returned
for reburial or other disposition by the tribe.
Second, the legislation makes clear that Indian
tribes own or control human remains and cul-
tural items which are excavated or discovered on
tribal land or federal land (where certain criteria
are met) and that they alone have the right to
determine disposition of Indian human remains
and cultural items discovered in these areas.
Third, the legislation prohibits the trafficking of


Contents: Vol. 16, No.1
Winter IM    '


Repatriation Act ........... 1

Case Updates ................ 5

New Board Members .......... 5


NARF Legal Review


Winter 1990


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