It
was a sad day for those who love to research and admire artefacts, documents
and artworks to witness it reduced to ashes on September 2 at the National
Museum of Brazil in Rio de Janeiro. The destruction of indigenous artefacts and
research documents, including relics of tribes that are considered extinct,
represented a far more personal blow for the descendants of Brazil’s oldest
inhabitants, who have spent decades fighting to preserve their heritage and
ancestral lands. The museum contained a collection of thousands of indigenous
artefacts pertaining to hundreds of ethnic groups. This collection gave insight
into understanding indigenous roots. It has given the indigenous people identify
in the national and international arena.
Having
lived in Brazil and in Aishalton, my heart goes out to the indigenous people
who painstakingly try to uphold their ancient culture and history. I appreciate
the hard work and commitment that some people display to safeguard the identity
of indigenous people through artefacts and documents of yesteryear. The
collection of these artefacts and documents can empower their fight for
identity and lands. When this is all gutted in the fire, what is left of them
now? There is only ash left of it at the smouldering museum ground. As I
sympathize with everyone who has felt the loss of the museum in Brazil, I wish
to appeal to everyone to be extra careful in safeguarding the ancient artefacts
and documents especially that of our indigenous people. These ancestral
properties could give great and significant insight into the culture, history,
language and importantly identity of those people in our contemporary
world.
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