Black Group Brings Benin Bronze Case Against Smithsonian to US Supreme Court
Black group filed petition for writ of certiorari with US Supreme Court on legal questions surrounding the Smithsonian's repatriation of Benin Bronzes.
"This case challenges the power of the Smithsonian to independently create its own art repatriation policy without even a public hearing or Congressional approval. We are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to decide if the Smithsonian has unilateral and arbitrary power to give America's art and science collection to foreign countries even where large numbers of Americans, such as U.S. descendant of enslaved people, claim a close and intimate connection with the art objects," said Bruce Afran, attorney for the petitioners.
The bronzes are ancient relics from a collection of as many as 10,000 made with metal manilla ingots paid to Benin Kingdom slave traders in exchange for the ancestors of Farmer-Paellmann and other descendants of enslaved Africans. DNA links Farmer-Paellmann and others represented in the case to Benin kingdom princes and nobles.
The petition raises three pivotal questions regarding the case, Farmer-Paellmann v. Smithsonian Institution, filed in October 2022 in the District Court of the District of Columbia, Case No. 22-cv-3048 (CRC), and dismissed on grounds of mootness in December 2023:
1. Jurisdiction Over Repatriation: Whether the Smithsonian Institution's repatriation of artworks to foreign states under an Ethical Return policy without following the rulemaking and public hearing processes mandated by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) is within the subject matter jurisdiction of the courts.
2. Standing of Descendants of Enslaved Africans: Whether descendants of enslaved Africans in the United States have Article III standing to challenge the Smithsonian's repatriation of 29 Benin Bronzes, which were created from metal manilla ingots used by Western slave traders in the purchase of enslaved persons from the Kingdom of Benin.
3. Mootness of the Case: Whether the lower courts erred in declaring the case moot given that nine of the Benin Bronzes have had their title transferred to Nigeria but remain in the United States on long-term loan, along with other Bronzes still under U.S. title but potentially subject to future repatriation.
The Restitution Study Group argues that these actions by the Smithsonian Institution bypass the necessary legal frameworks and fail to consider the historical and cultural significance these artifacts hold for the descendants of enslaved Africans.
"We need permanent access to these relics because we were sold away from our African homelands, culture, and customs -- these bronzes are our link to learning who we are. They are the embodiment of our enslaved ancestors," said Farmer-Paellmann.
This petition is a critical step in ensuring that repatriation policies are conducted transparently and legally, respecting both historical context, full provenance and the rights of affected communities.
The Restitution Study Group is in ongoing discussions with a number of other stakeholder institutions in the US, UK and Germany about their respective Benin Bronzes.
"This case speaks to our struggle globally to retain access to our cultural heritage as we Benin kingdom peoples are not just in Nigeria, and were not just held as chattel in the United States, but in the Caribbean as well as South and Central America too. We all stand together in support of the Restitution Study Group in this case," said Esther Xosei, UK based reparationist and coordinator-general of the Stop the Maangamizi Campaign.
"My ancestors were the first sold by the Benin kingdom to the Portuguese for the bronze metal in the 1500's and the last in 1888. There is no ethical return policy until our voices are heard on this matter," says Sheila Camorati of Brazil, a descendant of Benin kingdom captives residing in Germany and working in collaboration with the Restitution Study Group.
For further information or to schedule an interview with Deadria Farmer-Paellmann, Esther Xosei, Sheila Camaroti or legal counsel Bruce Afran, please contact Bruce Afran at 609-454-7435 or via email at [email protected].
Cannes 2023 Award winning short documentary: They Belong to All of Us - The Benin Bronze Slave Trade Story, Director's Cut: https://videopress.com/v/TXOq2GdB
Bruce Afran, Esq.
Bruce Afran Law Firm, LLC
+1 609-454-7435
email us here
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