Harvard University 's student paper reported that the university is illegally holding onto human remains.- Thousands of the remains belong to Native Americans and are held on campus.
Harvard University has held onto the remains of thousands of
Since the
The draft report, written by the Steering Committee on Human Remains in Harvard Museum Collections which was formed last year, discussed a push to increase the speed at which bodies are returned to descendants of the deceased or the appropriate affinity groups.
"They were obtained under the violent and inhumane regimes of
Most remains are held in the institution's Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnography.
"Our collection of these particular human remains is a striking representation of structural and institutional racism and its long half-life," the draft reads, according to The Crimson.
In a statement to Insider, the University said: "It is deeply frustrating that the Harvard Crimson chose to release an initial and incomplete draft report of the Committee on Human Remains."
"Releasing this draft is irresponsible reporting and robs the Committee of finalizing its report and associated actions, and puts in jeopardy the thoughtful engagement of the Harvard community in its release," the statement continued. "Further, it shares an outdated version with the Harvard community that does not reflect weeks of additional information and Committee work."
The leak comes just over a month after a faculty committee published a 134-page report highlighting Harvard's role in advancing "race theory" and
The April report, titled "Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery" and conducted by the faculty Committee on Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery, also highlighted that thousands of remains lingered on campus, but did not acknowledge the 1990 law.
"One aspect of the original mission of Harvard College was to educate (and convert) Native students alongside white classmates," the report reads, adding that the school also attempted to "civilize," enslave, and Christianize Indigenous people.
It then recommended the establishment of a steering committee and that the university engages descendants of enslaved individuals "through dialogue, programming, information sharing, relationship building, and educational support."
"For too long, these remains have been separated from their individuality, their history, and their communities," the draft report also reads.
Professor Evelynn Hammonds, the chair of the Steering Committee on Human Remains in Harvard Museum Collections, did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.