Mexico’s Nationwide Institute of Anthropology and Historical past (INAH) has accused Guanajuato’s Museo de las Momias of not following conservation protocol in a latest reconfiguration of its shows, leading to injury to a minimum of considered one of its mummies.
The museum—situated in a Sixteenth-century city that may be a Unesco World Heritage web site round 400km northwest of Mexico Metropolis—is known for its assortment of 117 naturally mummified our bodies, half of that are on show. The mummies had been exhumed from the adjoining mid-Nineteenth century Santa Paula Cemetery beginning in 1870 after members of the family of the deceased stopped paying burial charges; the our bodies had dehydrated because of the area’s dry, sizzling local weather.
With the mummies’ rising recognition amongst guests who frequented the cemetery, authorities determined to open a museum in 1969. Controversies on the museum are nothing new, starting from how the corpses are dealt with and toured to halted plans for a brand new venue and the museum’s perceived industrial exploitation of dying.
Not too long ago, a rearranging of the museum’s inside area sparked the ire of INAH, which questioned the conservation protocols adopted by the museum’s employees and condemned native authorities for his or her unwillingness to share the mission’s plans beforehand. After INAH’s specialists inspected the positioning, they confirmed that there was new injury to a minimum of one of many mummies, generally known as “The Stabbed One”, whose proper arm had reportedly come off. “Whereas the mother was already broken, its accidents at the moment are extra extreme,” INAH mentioned in a press release.
Metropolis authorities, who’ve jurisdiction over the museum and its assortment, refute the declare that any hurt resulted from the museum’s four-month-long redesign, which concerned altering the mummies from a vertical to a horizontal place and including heat gentle to the shows.
“The renovations introduced no new injury to the mummies,” Jesús Antonio Borja Pérez, Guanajuato’s director of tradition and training, tells The Artwork Newspaper. “For years the mummies deteriorated as a consequence of their exhibition and guests’ affinity for touching them or taking souvenirs, corresponding to bits of clothes. It was solely within the early 2000s once they had been protected by glass. On this renovation, we adopted earlier suggestions of INAH’s specialists to put the our bodies horizontally, they usually had been dealt with by skilled museum employees.”
Through the years, INAH and native authorities have signed collaborative agreements to protect and examine the mummies. In 2021, the federal authorities launched a large-scale analysis mission aiming to uncover the identities of the mummies by way of forensic evaluation.
“Whereas the archival work has concluded, intent on revealing the person tales of every corpse as an alternative of figuring out them by their nicknames, the forensic examine is deliberate for later this yr,” says Ilán Leboreiro, a organic anthropologist and a part of INAH’s analysis fee of Guanajuato’s mummies. “Normal suggestions, corresponding to horizontal placement, have been shared informally, however every physique requires specific situations to make sure its preservation. The pending forensic examine will set up the rules, that are as much as the museum to use.”
On the coronary heart of this controversy lies a priority for the dignified preservation of the naturally dehydrated our bodies, whose show initially resulted from guests’ curiosity—or morbid curiosity—however over time have grow to be a part of the id of town and its legends. There’s even a regional mummy-shaped brown-sugar sweet, charamusca. Nonetheless, the continuing debate additionally reveals a political rift between the federal entity INAH and native authorities, every run by opposing political factions.
Financial implications may be at play. Whereas Guanajuato’s will not be the one assortment of naturally mummified our bodies within the nation, it’s a extremely popular vacationer vacation spot. Simply final yr, the museum reported 500,000 guests, bringing in additional than $2.4m. “The museum represents town’s second most vital supply of earnings after property taxes,” Borja says.
All of those points are solely accentuated by Mexico’s upcoming basic election on 2 June.
However even with this heated controversy, INAH and native authorities are keen to proceed collaborating to make sure the preservation of the mummies, a few of that are stored off web site. “We’re open to beginning the following section of the forensic examine of INAH’s ongoing analysis mission,” Borja says.
For its half, INAH says: “There’s goodwill in working collectively to make sure the caring of some of the vital heritage symbols of the folks of Guanajuato.”