A University of Calgary researcher has established the first museum of its kind in Mozambique as a way to help stop the excavation and permanent removal of artifacts from history-rich communities in Africa while engaging the local population in Western and African academic research—two initiatives that should have started long ago, according to U of C archaeologist Julio Mercader and Arianna Fogelman, a Boston University PhD student.
Mercader was inspired to construct the museum, only the second museum in the country’s province of Niassa, after finding a cave located up a steep cliff overlooking Lake Niassa, which contained 1,000-year-old ritual bowls. The bowls were used as ancestral offerings when boys were taken to the cave for circumcision rituals.
More local content for the museum was produced in the summer of 2007 when Mercader’s team travelled to 25 villages near the museum and digitally recorded the oral traditions—personal histories, migration narratives, folktales, songs, etc.—of more than 200 people. The resultant 66 hours of sound and video files are archived and accessible to researchers and visitors.
“My greatest accomplishment has been collecting oral histories from a 150-kilometre stretch of the lake coast,” said Fogelman, who is working towards a PhD in socio-cultural anthropology. “Seeing the looks on people's faces when their stories and songs were played back and being able to share the recordings of one population with another, was extremely gratifying.”
Other socio-economic contributions aimed to alleviate some of the extreme poverty that exists in the communities in which Mercader and his team operate include employing local personnel (the security guard and museum manager both live in Niassa) and helping to build local schools and water pumps.
Mercader collaborated with the Universidade Eduardo Mondlane and Universidade Pedagógica, in Mozambique, for this project. The U.S. government has given $35,000 to support this project through the Ambassador's Fund for Cultural Preservation, operated out of the U.S. Department of State in Washington, DC and separate funding at the U.S. Embassy in Mozambique.
Other supporters and funders include the Mozambique Ministry of Education and Culture; the Smithsonian Institution; the Canada Research Chairs Program; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Committee; Canada Foundation for Innovation; Eduardo Mondlane University; Archaelogy and Anthropology Department; Projecto Lipilichi Wilderness; government and authorities of Niassa; and Direccao Nacional do Patrimonio Cultural e Monumentos.
Contact: Meghan Sired mssired@ucalgary.ca 403-220-4756 University of Calgary
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