Humboldt Forum | Germany
Humboldt Forum | Berlin | Germany
What does it mean to rebuild a Prussian base of power, name it after the brothers Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt, fashion it as the world centre for culture and cultural dialogue housing works from the Ethnological Museum of Berlin and the Museum of Asian Art? Did this provoke the choking? How did these arts and artefacts, objects and subjects get into these collections in the first place? What does it mean to have one of the founding directors, Horst Bredekamp, claim openly—as one could hear in Lorenz Rollhäuser’s “House of White Men: Humboldt Forum, Shared Heritage and Dealing with the Other”— that unlike other European cities like London, Brussels or Paris, Berlin did not collect colonially? (…)
As the debates surrounding the legitimacy of the so-called objects from Africa, Asia, Oceania and from Native American cultures in Western museums get louder, and as the pressure to repatriate them to their places of origin intensifies, some museum directors have sought to come up with smart-ass concepts that might make one misunderstand Marley as having sung, “Don’t let them fool ya / Or even try to screw ya!” instead of “school ya!”. Again, it seems there is a thin line between ‘schooling’ and ‘screwing’. The reasons given by the colonialists to set up the colonial enterprise around the world was often related to setting up or instituting a universal knowledge, which was synonymous with Western epistemology. The excuse was to bring civilisation to the uncivilised. To liberate them from savagery. To free them from false gods and introduce them to the one and only jealous God with a capital G. While the colonial soldiers, merchants and priests paved their ways on these missions, telling people to give up their false gods, others like Felix von Luschan were loitering in the metropole waiting for the seized and stolen ‘goods’ to be sent over. The schooling in the Western epistemology came hand in hand with a screwing of Indigenous knowledge and ways of being. It is thus no wonder that as the air gets tighter people like Hermann Parzinger have come up with ‘wonderful’ concepts like ‘shared heritage’. In his by now notorious 2016 ‘manifesto’, “Shared Heritage Is a Double Heritage” (…)
Let’s then take a look at Parzinger’s concept of ‘shared heritage’ through a detour into a few key points from his manifesto-like text. First of all, he writes: We manage the cultural assets of humanity together. So we should also share them with the nations that we once subjugated as colonies. While it is well intentioned to share the cultural assets at hand with the former colonised, the first question that arises is: Who gives you the mandate to manage the cultural assets of humanity? What does it mean to talk about the cultural assets of humanity that your nation once took from people who at the time were not even considered human? How is this sharing supposed to happen and under which power dynamics? Are nation states the right mediation or communication partners in such a venture?
Excerpts taken from Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung Performative Essay titled: South remembers: Those Who Are Dead Are Not Ever Gone.
The full text can be seen here and the performance here.