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"It's an enigma," said museum director Sebastien Minchin, adding that neither Drouet's full name nor profession is known. Until 1996, when the museum was closed for a decade, the head was displayed with the prehistoric collection. "As was done at the time, they compared the 'savage' from the other side of the world with our local cavemen," Minchin said in a telephone interview. When Minchin became director in 2006 and discovered the head, he decided to store it because exposing it "could pose problems" for both the Maoris and the public. Minchin said that the problem goes beyond legal issues in France. He said he was criticized for opening "Pandora's box" when he first tried to return the head. "There is a fear of emptying our museums," he said. "There is a fear of restitution demands for other human remains, and notably Egyptian mummies." France passed a special law before the 2002 return to South Africa of the skeleton and bottled organs of Saartjie Baartman, a 19th century African woman exhibited in Paris and London, sometimes in a cage, sometimes dressed in feathers, under the pejorative nickname, "the Hottentot Venus."
[Associated
Press;
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