This article is generally accurate and slightly oversimplifying. It correctly states that the Vatican plans to return dozens of artifacts to Indigenous communities in Canada, yet does not explain that this process is still underway and not entirely finalized. The article states that while Indigenous groups met with Vatican officials in 2022, Vatican officials were “open to returning” culturally significant items such as wampum belts, ceremonial masks, and an Inuit kayak at indigenous groups’ request, but it is unclear if those specific items were ever repatriated (AP News)
Additional historical analysis from the Christian Science Monitor mirrors the AP article’s discussion that many of these artifacts were potentially gifted by indigenous groups and brought by missionaries to the Vatican during the 1925 exhibition, and Indigenous groups have since argued that these items were collected under colonial power dynamics rather than through legitimate consent (Christian Science Monitor)
Canadian leaders, including former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, have publicly urged the Vatican to return these artifacts as part of broader efforts toward reconciliation for the harms caused by the Church’s involvement in Indigenous residential schools. (University of Western Ontario News)
Overall, I think the article’s main point is true, but it slightly oversimplifies the situation by not acknowledging that the return is still in progress (and likely to be in progress for some time). It spends a lot of time discussing specifics of the contingency of the return and what procedures will take place, which could potentially misguide readers to think that those plans have been finalized and executed.