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  • 31/07/2023
Nisga'a Memorial Totem Pole.

Chanté St Clair Inglis, head of collections at the National Museum of Scotland, on the project to the House of Ni’isjoohl Memorial Pole after nearly a century and return it to its place of origin in Canada.

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Transcript
00:00 So I'm Shante St Clair Ingalls, Head of Collection Services at National Museum Scotland.
00:04 This is the memorial pole. It's a kind of totem pole that memorialises an individual.
00:10 That individual is Tsawwit. He is a Nisga'a warrior from the Nisga'a nation in British Columbia.
00:16 The memorial pole tells the story of Tsawwit and his family and it's been on display here
00:22 at National Museum Scotland since 1930. It's carved out of red cedar and it's 11 metres tall
00:27 and it weighs just over one tonne. The memorial pole is going to be returned to the Nisga'a nation.
00:32 Lowering and moving the memorial pole out of the museum requires a complex series of tasks.
00:39 So in order to do that safely we have to first create space around the pole and that's what you
00:44 can see here. We are currently temporarily relocating objects, protecting display cases,
00:49 to create that space. Then we will build a scaffold around the pole and use that to fit a steel cradle
00:55 to the pole and that keeps it protected throughout the move. So the pole will be safely lifted and
01:01 lowered, moved through the museum building and out of a large window and from there safely onwards
01:06 to the Nisga'a nation in British Columbia. So while we're doing all this work you still have
01:11 the opportunity to come and see the memorial pole from the balconies above us until the end of August.
01:18 [No audio]

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