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Amanda Lees
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POLL of the DAY (348) : DISPLAYING HUMAN DIGNITY?

POLL of the DAY (348) : DISPLAYING HUMAN DIGNITY?

Later this month a museum in the French city of Lyon will open an exhibition exploring death and the way it is represented by different cultures through the ages. The exhibition will include a skeleton discovered in a South American ancient buriel site.

While many people are fascinated by death and there is much to learn from those who lived before us, should such exhibitions display real people; people whose beliefs may be disrespected by the movement of their bodies from the original resting place and subsequent public display?

Consider this as you read the following:

'More than 1,000 years ago, this 50-year-old woman was laid to rest in a ceremonial ritual in the ancient settlement of Pachacamac, near Lima, Peru.

The mummified skeleton, which was found in a vast burial site just yards from the long-abandoned civilisation's temple, was discovered in a foetal position.

Careful not to damage the well-preserved body of the woman, archaeologists have kept her in the same state she was found in as they prepare to unveil the mummy for a French museum exhibition.

The mummy will be revealed to the public at the Musee de Confluences, in Lyon, when it opens later this month.

From a pre-Inca civilisation, the frail skeleton will form part of the new museum's exploration of human representations of death in different ages and cultures around the world.

Pachacamac, based around 25 miles south of the Peruvian capital, was situated on the Pacific coastline.

More than 80 skeletons and mummies - including infants who appeared to have been killed for ritual reasons - were found in a spectacular 1,000-year-old tomb at the site in 2012.

Beyond these bodies, a further 70 skeletons and mummies - all in the fetal position - were lying around, most of them still wrapped up. 

The thousands who lived in the ancient town, which existed between the years 800 and 1450, followed the god Pacha Kamaq - who they believed created the first man and first woman.

The townsfolk, who built 17 pyramids, merged with the Incas as they conquered much of South America. 

The monumental site, which covers almost 600 hectares of arid land, is considered one of the most important ancient settlements in South America, widely thought to be as significant as Machu Picchu and the Nazca Lines. 

The mummy as found by the Ychsma Project, directed by of the Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, which has held archaeological digs in Pachacamac since 1999.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2872483/Peruvian-mummy-1-000-years-old-curled-foetal-position-pre-Inca-burial-site-goes-display-French-museum.html

How do we balance the desires of the living to learn about the past with the rights of the dead?

Should these remains be displayed in public?

What do you think?

Image source

 

It is proposed that human remains should not be displayed in museums