The Dutch government has returned 1,500 historical artifacts to Indonesia, four years after an agreement was made with the Education and Culture Ministry.
Credit: National Museum Jakarta |
The 100-year-old Nusantara Museum was the only museum in the Netherlands dedicated specifically to art and cultural objects from Indonesia, a former Dutch colony, and it closed its doors in 2013 due to financial difficulties.
The museum had initially offered to hand over around 12,000 artifacts to Indonesia, but the culture director-general opted to accept a selection of 1,500 objects instead.
The repatriation process symbolically started in November 2016, when Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte presented President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo with a Bugis keris from the collection.
Credit: National Museum Jakarta |
National Museum head Siswanto said the museum would present the artifacts to the public in an exhibition scheduled for June 2020.
He added that the returned artifacts would not just be limited to the National Museum.
“Other museums will also have the opportunity to get back their cultural objects. This offer might encourage regional museums to improve the quality of their collection.”
Credit: National Museum Jakarta |
“The return [of the artifacts] is a very meaningful New Year’s gift,” Adrianus said in a statement on the official House of Representatives website.
“Going forward, we have the responsibility to safeguard, secure and take care of these valuable historical relics. If other nations value Indonesia’s culture, we should value it even more.”
Source: The Jakarta Post [January 07, 2020]
* This article was originally published here
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