The Guardian
February 9, 2016
Since mid-2015 the museum – which has a collection of about 6,000 Indigenous Australian items – has corresponded and met with the Dja Dja Wurrung’s Yung Balug clan elder Gary Murray, who is demanding the return of three bark artefacts and other material taken from his people in the 1850s.
This week the British Museum’s deputy director, Jonathan Williams, issued Murray and the Dja Dja Wurrung with a draft memorandum of understanding indicating “shared interest relating to the objects associated with the Dja Dja Wurrung people in the British Museum”.
The memorandum is a likely first step towards a 2017 exhibition that would feature the barks. The exhibition would be held at the Bendigo Regional Art Gallery, in Dja Dja Wurrung country in central Victoria, and would represent a return of the items, freighted with great spiritual significance to their owners, to their country for the first time in 160 years."
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