It cannot be the preserve of a few great museums. Cambodia8217;s claim on its stolen statues underlines this
This could have been a sequel to Wilkie Collinss novel The Moonstone. Tenth-century Khmer statues were stolen from temple ruins in a Cambodian jungle,when the country was plunged in civil war. Earlier this month,the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York decided to return two of these statues to Cambodia,convinced by evidence that they had been plundered. Now,Cambodian officials have appealed to other American museums and collectors to return artefacts that were stolen after 1970.
In the Munich declaration of 2002,18 leading museums argued that todays ethical standards could not be imposed on the past,but that they had a duty to display the worlds heritage. This led to more cooperation among museums on curating,lending and joint exhibitions. But the past cannot be the preserve of big museums in metropolitan cities. It must be seen and experienced by all those who would claim it for their own. The worlds great museums must do more to diffuse the knowledge stored in their glass cabinets and make it accessible everywhere.