Newsletter Subscribe
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

The Vatican is poised to announce the repatriation of dozens of Indigenous artifacts to Canadian communities, marking a pivotal moment in the Catholic Church’s efforts to address its role in cultural suppression across the Americas. Officials confirmed Wednesday that the Holy See expects to formally announce the return within weeks, with the artifacts potentially arriving in Canada before year-end.mprnews
The items, numbering “a few dozen” according to Vatican and Canadian sources, include an Inuit kayak, wampum belts, war clubs, and ceremonial masks from the Vatican Museum’s ethnographic Anima Mundi collection. The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops stated it has been collaborating with Indigenous groups to return the items to their “originating communities”.latimes
Negotiations accelerated following Pope Francis’s 2022 meeting with Indigenous leaders who traveled to Rome to receive his apology for the Church’s involvement in Canada’s residential school system. During their visit, the delegates were shown objects in the Vatican collection and formally requested their return.latimes
“For First Nations, these items are not artifacts. They are living, sacred pieces of our cultures and ceremonies and must be treated as the invaluable objects that they are,” Assembly of First Nations National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak told Canadian Press.mid-day
The Pope subsequently endorsed repatriation on a case-by-case basis, stating: “In the case where you can return things, where it’s necessary to make a gesture, better to do it”.sfgate
Most items in the collection were sent to Rome by Catholic missionaries for a 1925 Vatican exhibition celebrating the Church’s global missionary reach. While the Vatican maintains the objects were “gifts” to Pope Pius XI, historians and Indigenous advocates question whether items could have been freely given amid the power imbalances of Catholic missions during that era.mid-day
The repatriation will follow the “church-to-church” model used when the Vatican returned Parthenon Marbles to the Orthodox Christian Church in Greece in 2023. The artifacts will be transferred to the Canadian bishops’ conference with the understanding that Indigenous communities will be the ultimate custodians.thecatholicherald
Initially, the items will be housed at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Quebec, where experts and Indigenous representatives will work to identify their specific community origins and determine appropriate next steps.latimes