Ritual as Maori bones return home

**An ancient ritual is to be performed during a ceremony in a museum before the skeletal remains of 12 Maoris are sent back from Wales to New Zealand.**The skeleton of a female and bones of 11 other people were part of the Welsh national collection at National Museum Cardiff.

But they are being repatriated after recent research showed features consistent with Polynesian ancestry.

Before the remains are packed, a call and chant of acknowledgement is made.

The remains - known as köiwi tangata - will then be greeted during the hour-long ceremony, which will be attended by workers from the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, which has helped arrange the repatriation.

Following a closing prayer, all participants of the ceremony will press noses as part of the completion process and sprinkle water over their heads and bodies.

It was appropriate to offer them back to their country of origin to lay their souls to rest

Richard Brewer, Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales

Research has shown that the remains were originally obtained from Ahuahu, or Great Mercury Island, which is the largest in the Mercury Islands group, located off the north-east coast of New Zealand’s North Island.

Te Herekiekie Herewini, Te Papa’s repatriation manager, said it was important to return the ancestors to their original community in New Zealand: “This is significant for Maori as it is believed that through the ancestors’ return to their homeland, the dead and their living descendants will retrieve their dignity, and also close the hurt and misdeeds of the past,” he said.

Richard Brewer, keeper of archaeology, Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales, said: “After studying the remains and realising their significance to the Mori community, Amgueddfa Cymru felt it was appropriate to offer them back to their country of origin to lay their souls to rest.”

The return of the bones forms part of Karanga Aotearoa, which is the New Zealand government-mandated authority that negotiates the repatriation of ancestral remains on behalf of Maori.

Since May 2004, it has repatriated ancestral remains from eight countries, bringing home 149 kiwi tangata (skeletal remains) and Toi moko (mummified tattooed heads).

Amgueddfa Cymru operates seven national museums across Wales, including the museum in Cardiff.