Don't just save them, keep, show and tell
India's successful intervention halted the auction of ancient Buddha relics at Sotheby's, emphasizing the nation's commitment to reclaiming its heritage. While repatriation efforts are commendable, the real challenge lies in ensuring proper custod...

But retrieving stolen treasures is only the beginning. Too often, artefacts brought back home are swallowed into silence - locked in storerooms, or shuffled into half-forgotten museums. Even those on public display often suffer from patchy maintenance. The Seated Buddha triumphantly returned from Australia in 2017, and now reportedly sits outside a museum director's office. Some return for glory, others for gathering dust.
Systemic neglect risks making these treasures 'lost' all over again - this time not to colonial looters but to our own apathy. Poor documentation, underfunded conservation and low public visibility remain serious challenges. It's one thing to demand the return of history. It's quite another to prove worthy custodianship. So, while GoI's intervention at Sotheby's is welcome, it must not stop there. India needs a clear, ambitious plan - to not just store relics safely but to showcase them widely, proudly and professionally, like it was done in Khajuraho during the G20 summit. Proper conservation, modern site museums and maximum public access must be the goal. Bringing our history home is just the start.
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