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Spread over 14,000 square metres (150,000 square feet), the Museum of Black Civilisation has a capacity to house 18,000 pieces. — AFP Photo |
DAKAR — A museum showcasing black heritage from the dawn of time to the modern era opened in the Senegalese capital Dakar on Thursday.
The opening came as African countries press harder for the restitution of artwork from their former colonial masters – and as France made its first steps in that direction, pledging to return artworks to Benin.
The Museum of Black Civilisations will foster the “dialogue of cultures” and offer a “new view of Africa and its diaspora, which recognises our part in the great human adventure,” Senegalese President Macky Sall said as he opened the museum.
“Today rekindles in us the precursors of pan-Africanism and African identity,” Sall said after cutting the symbolic ribbon at the ceremony. Among the guests was Chinese Culture Minister Luo Shugang, whose country financed the project to the tune of 30 million euros (US$34 million).
Spread over 14,000 square metres, the museum has a capacity to house 18,000 pieces, said museum director Hamady Bocoum.
Both Bocoum and the museum’s lead scientist Ibrahima Thioub said the collection, which includes megaliths dating back more than 1,700 years ago alongside contemporary art, would both honour the past and look to the future.
It should not be “a place of nostalgia but a crucible of creativity, a factory of self-esteem,” said Thioub, rector of Dakar’s Cheikh-Anta-Diop University.
A dream fulfilled
Such a museum was the dream of Senegal’s first president Leopold Sedar Senghor, among the drivers of the Negritude literary movement born in the 1960s.
The poet, who was Senegal’s president from 1960 to 1980, spoke of it at the first World Festival of Black Arts, held in Dakar in 1966.
“We are in the continuity of history,” Sall said Thursday. “Through the ages, Africa invented, fashioned and transformed, thus constantly participating in the flow of innovations. Our duty is to remain vigilant sentinels of the heritage of the ancients.”
The museum is among several new – or overhauled – facilities springing up around Africa that bolster growing demands for the restitution of artworks spirited out of the continent since colonial times.
Late last month France announced it would return 26 cultural artefacts to Benin. It was a first gesture acting on the findings of a study commissioned by President Emmanuel Macron on repatriating African treasures held by French museums.
Senegal was quick to call for the restitution of some 10,000 pieces of Senegalese art from France.
Ivory Coast followed suit the next day, asking for the return of around 100 works of art.
In a reflection of the museum’s embrace of the ages, Thursday’s ceremony was followed by a show featuring traditional music and dance as well as rap and slam performances.
The hundreds of guests also heard homages to giants of black civilisation including American civil rights hero Martin Luther King and Burkinabe revolutionary Thomas Sankara. — AFP
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