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Collaboration and Care Guide Return of Meskwaki Artifacts From UNI to Their Tribal Home

The Meskwaki Nation worked with the University of Northern Iowa to return cultural artifacts to the tribe. The items will now be housed at The Meskwaki Cultural Center and Museum.

The Meskwaki Nation worked with the University of Northern Iowa to return cultural artifacts to the tribe. The items will now be housed at The Meskwaki Cultural Center and Museum.
The Meskwaki Nation and the University of Northern Iowa have worked together to return cultural artifacts to the tribe. (Madeleine Openshaw/Shutterstock).

The Meskwaki Nation worked with the University of Northern Iowa to return cultural artifacts to the tribe. The items will now be housed at The Meskwaki Cultural Center and Museum.

The Meskwaki Nation has worked with the University of Northern Iowa to return several cultural artifacts to the tribe. The items had been part of UNIโ€™s Meskwaki museum collectionโ€”now, theyโ€™ll be housed and displayed at theย Meskwaki Cultural Center and Museumย instead. The Meskwaki are Iowaโ€™s only federally recognized tribe, and theyโ€™ve been working to preserve indigenous history and heritage in the state. This development is the latest step toward sustaining that goal.

Items in the collection range in date from the 1800s through the 1980s and include a mimishi stick, which is a type of fork. The Tribal Historic Preservation Officer for Sac & Foxโ€™s Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa, Tieranny Keahna, spoke about the artifacts and what itโ€™s like to bring them back into the tribeโ€™s fold. โ€œIt was a welcoming home ceremony for about 12 or so artifacts,โ€ย Keahna said. She added,ย โ€œTheyโ€™re not objects. They hold special significance to our tribe. Every item has a purpose, has a soul in a way. Being able to welcome these individual souls home is a homecoming, and we just want to welcome them home with open arms.โ€

Recovering the artifacts is one part of the reparation processย 

Being able to preserve the history and heritage of Iowaโ€™s indigenous peoples is only one part of the equation when it comes to bringing the Meskwaki artifacts back to the tribeโ€™s Cultural Center and Museum. Reparations are another crucial aspect of this partnership. As Tieranny Keahna toldย KCCI,ย โ€œReparation is when the tribe wants to make a claim for something that a museum or institution holds, saying we have ownership to this and they want to bring it back.โ€

Oftentimes, museums purchase artifacts or receive them via donation, but Keahna pointed out that this typically happens between the institution and an individual tribal member or collector. Itโ€™s rare for the entire tribe to be aware of the transaction until after it happens. As she told the outlet, โ€œMost of the time itโ€™s via private collectors that have donated this, and we are not aware of those collections being donated.โ€

The Meskwaki Cultural Center and Museumโ€™s Historical Preservation Director, Johnathan Buffalo, first contacted the University of Northern Iowa during the 1990s to discuss having the university return the cultural artifacts. The school contacted Buffalo again at the beginning of 2025, and the items were returned more recently. Keahna told KCCI, โ€œIt was a short process. Some of these reparations take a long time.โ€

UNIโ€™s president, Mark Nook, told the outlet that the school is honored to have been able to return these culturally significant items to the Meskwaki Nation. He added that UNI is committed to maintaining and strengthening its bond with the tribe.

This article first appeared on Good Info News Wire and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

Related: 5 Things To Know About Iowaโ€™s Meskwaki Nation For Indigenous Peoplesโ€™ Day