The Road of Reconciliation: Recovery of Rights, Indigenous Participation, and Responsibility of Academia

Presented by ANU College of Asia & the Pacific

The Ainu people are Indigenous people of Japan, but their social status was not officially recognised until 2008. The Ainu are an overwhelming minority in current Japanese society and have been deprived of their land, language and cultural traditions through a long history of colonial assimilation policies, and their rights to pass on their traditions have been restricted.

Like other Indigenous peoples, the Ainu were subjected to racial anthropology in the 19th and 20th centuries, and the ancestral remains of Ainu were collected from the graveyard in Hokkaido Island, the Kuril Islands, and Sakhalin Island. Some of these remains were exchanged with the other Indigenous ancestral remains from Australia, Hawaii, North and South America, and Europe as research specimens.

The movement for the repatriation of ancestral remains of the Ainu began in the 1980s. However, only a small portion of ancestral remains have been reburied, and most remain in the National Resting Space in Shiraoi town. Some ancestral remains Ainu are also stored in museums and research facilities overseas, and their details and total number are unknown. The repatriation of ancestral remains is a step toward healing past injustices and a gateway to future reconciliation. In this lecture, Japanese archaeologist Professor Hirofumi KATO will consider the importance of the Ainu people's participation in all processes of indigenous repatriation, not limited to human remains, as an essential perspective for the reconciliation process with the Ainu people in Japan. Furthermore, this talk will prompt the audience to consider the role and responsibilities that the research community should assume in advancing reconciliation with the Ainu people and addressing past injustices.

Light refreshments will be provided. For catering purposes, please RSVP by 1 June if you intend on attending in person. 

Date and Times

Location

Hedley Bull 1, Hedley Bull Building | Online via Zoom
Acton, ANU Campus
Canberra, ACT, 2601

Speakers

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