A traditional Inuit kayak displayed in a museum for an article about Indigenous artifact repatriation

Vatican returns 62 Indigenous artifacts to Canada a century after they were taken

Pope Leo XIV handed over 62 cultural belongings to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops on Saturday, closing a chapter that opened 100 years ago when missionaries shipped the items to Rome for a 1925 exhibition. The collection — which includes an Inuit kayak historically used for whale hunting in Canada’s far north and embroidered gloves from the Cree Nation — will be flown back to Canada on December 6 C.E. and eventually returned to the communities they came from. It is the most concrete act of restitution the Vatican has made since Pope Francis issued a formal apology to First Nations for the Church’s role in residential schools in 2022 C.E.

At a glance

  • Indigenous artifact repatriation: 62 cultural belongings from multiple Indigenous nations across Canada were held in the Vatican’s Anima Mundi ethnographic museum for roughly a century before this transfer.
  • Inuit kayak: Among the most significant items is a rare kayak used historically for whale hunting in Canada’s far north — an object of deep practical and ceremonial meaning for Inuit communities.
  • Path forward: The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops will transfer the items to Canada’s National Indigenous Organizations, which will coordinate their return to specific communities of origin.

What was taken — and why it matters

The items were collected by Catholic missionaries and sent to Rome to appear in a 1925 exhibition organized by Pope Pius XI that displayed more than 100,000 objects from around the world. They came from several different nations across Canada and ended up in long-term storage at the Vatican Museums.

They were taken during a period when Canadian law and Catholic decrees both prohibited Indigenous spiritual practices. Certain ceremonial items were effectively banned. That context matters because the Church has described the objects as “gifts” from tribal leaders — a characterization critics dispute, given the power imbalance of the era.

For the communities they came from, these are not museum pieces. They carry language, memory, and technique accumulated over generations. Their absence was not just a cultural loss — it was one thread in a broader effort to sever Indigenous peoples from their own identities.

The negotiation that made it possible

Returning the items required sustained diplomacy. Indigenous communities formally requested repatriation during Pope Francis’s 2022 C.E. “penitential pilgrimage” to Canada, where he met with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis leaders and offered an apology for the Church’s role in residential schools. That request took three years to fulfill.

The process involved the Vatican, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, and national Indigenous organizations including Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami. Canada’s ambassador to the Holy See confirmed the logistics with CBC News. The cost of repatriating the items was prepaid by the tribes themselves — a detail that reflects both the depth of their commitment and a practical inequity worth naming.

Pope Leo XIV framed the handover in a joint statement with the CCCB as “a concrete sign of dialogue, respect and fraternity.” Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly called it “an important step that honours the diverse cultural heritage of Indigenous peoples and supports ongoing efforts toward truth, justice, and reconciliation.”

What happens next

The items will be transferred to Canada’s National Indigenous Organizations, which will coordinate their return to specific communities of origin. Indigenous ceremonies are planned before the official handovers can take place.

Determining exact provenance for each object takes time. Not every item’s origin is immediately clear, and getting it right matters. Knowledge keepers and researchers will work through that process carefully.

There is also the larger question this transfer raises without answering. Sixty-two objects is a meaningful number, but institutions across Europe and North America still hold vast collections of Indigenous cultural belongings assembled during the colonial era — most of them never reviewed for repatriation. The CBC Indigenous coverage of this transfer notes it is accelerating broader policy conversations in Canada. This is a step, not a finish line.

A signal to other institutions

The Vatican is not the first major institution to return Indigenous belongings, but its scale and symbolism make this transfer significant. The International Council of Museums has been pushing member institutions to review collections for repatriation for years, with mixed results. The Vatican’s follow-through — three years after a public commitment, across considerable logistical complexity — demonstrates that accountability can cross centuries and borders.

It also connects to a wider pattern. The principle driving this repatriation — that Indigenous peoples should control their own heritage — is the same principle reshaping international environmental policy. At COP30, recognition of Indigenous land stewardship covering vast territories has moved from aspiration to formal acknowledgment. These shifts reinforce each other.

For communities still waiting for the return of their own sacred belongings, this outcome is evidence that sustained advocacy works — and that institutions, even ancient ones, can change. The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which Canada endorsed in 2016 C.E., frames repatriation as a right. The Vatican’s action gives that framework one more concrete example to build on.

Critics and communities alike will be watching whether the momentum holds — whether this becomes a model or an exception.

Read more

For more on this story, see: BBC News

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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