Skip to main content

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF COUNTRY

The Australian Government acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Australia and acknowledges their continuing connection to land, waters and community. We pay our respects to the people, the cultures and the Elders past and present.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices and names of deceased persons.

Five First Nations ancestors welcomed home from Berlin

Culture and cultural heritage
Ugar Island community member Yessie Mosby carries ancestral remains at the handover ceremony, held at the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, Germany.

​​A handover ceremony for 5 First Nations ancestors was held at the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, Germany on 5 December 2024.​

Photo: Ugar Island community member Yessie Mosby carries ancestral remains at the handover ceremony, held at the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, Germany.

​​Five First Nations ancestors have arrived home from Germany following a joint handover ceremony at the Ethnological Museum of Berlin on 5 December 2024.

​Four representatives from the Ugar Island community in the Torres Strait Islands travelled to Berlin to accompany their Ugaram Le Omasker ancestors home.

​For Sereako Stephen, the return of the Ugar ancestors, who were removed more than 140 years ago, is an act of reconciliation.

​‘It is time to return our ancestors to their descendants and their community. These ancestors were removed without consent, and now they are coming home.  

​‘We thank everyone who has been involved in this journey of returning our ancestors back to their Traditional Custodians and Country, as this is true reconciliation in action,’ he said.

​Community representative, Tomson Stephen, acknowledged the impact the return of their ancestors will have on community.

​‘Returning ancestors to Country is part of the process to progress healing and truth-telling in Australia of the past injustices to First Nations People’, he said.  

​‘The return of our Ugaram Le Omasker ancestors is significant for our community as it will bring healing and peace to our people and ancestors.’​

​The remaining 3 ancestors will be cared for by the Australian Government, until they can be returned to their Traditional Custodians and Country.

​The handover ceremony saw the return of:

  • ​Three ancestors from the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation.
  • ​Two ancestors from the State Museum for Nature and People Oldenburg.

​Since 2013, 162 First Nations ancestors from German collecting institutions and private holders have been returned through the Indigenous Repatriation Program.

​There are ongoing discussions with other German institutions to secure agreement for the unconditional and voluntary return of ancestors from their collections.

​Australia's National Cultural Policy Revive acknowledges the importance of respecting and promoting the rights of First Nations people to repatriate their ancestors and cultural heritage material.​

 

 

For more information

Visit ​​www.arts.gov.au/repatriation