Judge rejects attempt to halt auction of Hopi sacred objects
SURVIVAL INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
April 12, 2013
Paris judge rejects attempt to halt auction of
Hopi sacred objects
Robert Redford amongst many
who had asked for auction to be scrapped
A Paris judge has thrown out a bid by Survival International to block a controversial auction of sacred objects of Arizona’s Hopi tribe. The judge ruled that ‘in spite of their sacredness to the Hopi these masks are not a representation of any creature, alive or dead.’
The auction house Neret-Minet Tessier & Sarrou had turned down repeated requests by the tribe to postpone the sale, which which will now take place in Paris today.
The Hopi tribe is ‘vehemently opposed’ to the auction of the Katsinam (“friends”), which are of spiritual significance to the tribe, and had requested that the objects be returned to them immediately.
Lawyers for Survival International had asked the judge to stop the sale until the lawfulness of the collection could be established, but there is now no legal obstacle to the auction taking place.
Actor Robert Redford earlier pleaded for the auction to be scrapped. ‘To auction these would be, in my opinion, a sacrilege – a criminal gesture that contains grave moral repercussions. I would hope that these sacred items can be returned to the Hopi tribe where they belong. They are not for auction’, he said in a statement.
Lawyer Pierre Servan-Schreiber of the firm Skadden, Arps said today, ‘This is a very unfortunate outcome, as these objects will now be sold and dispersed, and the likelihood that they will eventually return to their true home amongst the Hopi is severely reduced. It also probably means that French institutions are still not fully aware of the devastating consequences that such mercantile fate for truly sacred objects may have on tribes who have already suffered so much.’
Stephen
Corry, Director of Survival International, said today,
‘Potential buyers of these objects should be aware that
the Hopi are profoundly distressed at their sale, and regard
them as the rightful property of the Hopi people. French law
appears to offer the Hopi little comfort, but we still hope
that justice will prevail, and that these objects can still
be returned to their proper
owners.’
ends