Sacred Native American masks sold in France

Published December 16, 2014
Paris: Navajo Nation President Rex Lee Jim speaks to journalists outside an auction house here on Monday. He and other Navajo human rights activists who tried to block the auction of sacred masks and objects.—AFP
Paris: Navajo Nation President Rex Lee Jim speaks to journalists outside an auction house here on Monday. He and other Navajo human rights activists who tried to block the auction of sacred masks and objects.—AFP

PARIS: Some 250 sacred NativeAmerican, Eskimo and pre-Colombian artefacts went under the hammer in France on Monday despite strong opposition from the Navajo and Hopi tribes who travelled to Paris to try to halt the sale.

It was the fourth time in two years that sacred masks from the Hopi tribe have been sold at auction in France.

The 18,000-strong Hopi tribe of Arizona uses the masks in dances at religious ceremonies that are normally closed to outsiders.

The tribe and Survival International advocacy group did not protest the sale on this occasion, instead launching legal action to try to identify the buyers and sellers, according to their lawyer Pierre Servan-Schreiber.

Representatives from another tribe, the Navajos, chose another route — buying back their masks at a cost of 1,500 euros ($1,800).

“We are happy to bring back with us these sacred masks that will be purified by our shamans who will decide when they can be used for our winter ceremonies,” said Rex Lee Jime, vice president of the Navajo nation, which counts some 200,000 members spread across Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado.

The sale, organised by the Eve auction house, passed without incident at the Hotel Drouot in central Paris but two people were ejected for fear they would try to disrupt the event.

STOP CULTURAL GENOCIDE: Around 20 Hopi masks were sold, and efforts to name the buyers were not successful.

A rare double mask resembling two bird’s heads stacked upon each other that had belonged to the founder of a modern art museum in Dallas, went for 87,500 euros.

“We have no intention of divulging the name of the sellers or the buyers of the masks. That stays in the private domain,” Eve auctioneer Alain Leroy said ahead of the sale.

He said it was legal to own, collect and sell the colourful masks and statuettes.

“This sale is not scandalous because it is not forbidden. “Three activists stood outside the auction with cards saying “We are not for sale” and “Stop cultural genocide”.

The Hopis’ case had drawn support from the US embassy in Paris, which had called for the auction to be suspended.

As with the four previous sales since 2013, the Board of Voluntary Sales, which oversees the sector, rejected Hopi calls to ban the auction.

The Hopis’ lawyer said certain masks could have been “exported fraudulently to be sold in France”.

While the sale of sacred Indian artefacts has been outlawed in the United States since 1990 — legislation which has allowed the tribe to recover items held by American museums in the past — the law does not extend to sales overseas.

In April last year the sale of some 70 Hopi masks fetched around 930,000 euros despite international appeals to halt the auction, decried as a sacrilege by activists including Hollywood legend Robert Redford.

Brightly-coloured, intricate “Kachina” dolls and masks or headdresses are valued at thousands of euros.—AFP

Published in Dawn, December 16th, 2014

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