Natural History Museum returns ancestral remains to Japan

This article was first published by the Museums + Heritage Advisor.

The Natural History Museum has formally returned ancestral remans to Japan as part of a ceremony this week.

On 5 May 2026, the museum hosted the Japan Government’s Minister of Cabinet Office for Ainu-related Policies Kikawada Hitoshi and representatives from the Ainu Association of Hokkaido, led by Executive Director Ōkawa Masaru, to mark the return of seven Ainu ancestral remains.

The museum said it has been working in close collaboration with the Government of Japan and the Ainu Association of Hokkaido to transfer responsibility for the ancestral remains and return them to their places of origin.

Museum staff carried out archival research to understand the provenance of the ancestral remains, and a report was shared with the Government of Japan, who then outlined their wishes.

Following their return, the ancestral remains will be placed in the Memorial Site that has been established in the Upopoy National Ainu Museum and Park, Symbolic Space for Ethnic Harmony – UPOPOY – in accordance with the basic policy based on the Japanese Government’s Ainu Policy Promotion Act.