News

Reunited: Stolen art goes home, and why lonely habitats need company

1. United States

The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in New York has secured the return of more than 950 stolen antiquities in the past year. More than $160 million worth of art and artifacts have been returned to 17 countries, from Cambodia and Pakistan to Greece and Italy.

At a March repatriation ceremony for 12 Turkish antiquities, the artifacts included a bronze of a Roman emperor that was looted from an archaeological site in the 1960s, smuggled to Europe, loaned to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and in 2011 landed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, there’s a dedication to repairing the divisions that people have caused – in nature and in the world of art.

The returns come as institutions are reckoning with items in their collections that were stolen – or at least acquired in a dubious manner. Native American ancestral remains are a special category covered by their own U.S. law, and some museums and universities have pledged to return these remains only to be slow to follow through.

Ben Hider/AP

Antiquities are displayed at a repatriation ceremony in New York announcing the return of stolen antiquities to Italy, Sept. 6, 2022.

But returns are making a difference: In Italy, where illegally excavated artifacts belong to the state, the Museum of Rescued Art opened in Rome last summer. “Up until 10 years ago, it was considered oh so gauche to ask inconvenient questions of provenance – it just wasn’t done,” said Matthew Bogdanos, who founded the antiquities traffic unit, in a TV interview. “That was then. … This is now.”
Sources: CBS News, Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, ProPublica

2. Brazil

A nonprofit is working to reconnect “islands” of Brazil’s original Atlantic Forest. Much of this coastal rainforest southeast of the Amazon has been fragmented by farms, ranches, and people, leaving patches of forest isolated from one another. It’s a threat to biodiversity, as species struggle to survive with shrinking gene pools and less land.

By purchasing and rewilding stretches of ranchland and farmland that separate small forest areas, the group Saving Nature is creating corridors to strengthen resiliency of vulnerable flora and fauna. More biodiversity in larger ecosystems can also store more carbon than can plantation forests or degraded farmland.

Bruna Prado/AP

This group of monkeys lives in a park in Silva Jardim, Brazil, in the Atlantic Forest.

After buying enough cattle pasture for a 250-acre corridor to connect to the 6,200-acre União Biological Reserve, Saving Nature handed over the property to reserve officials, who obtained a conservation easement. Now, the total area of protected space contains 49,400 acres of contiguous forest.

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