France returns sacred talking drum looted during colonial rule to Ivory Coast

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A sacred drum looted by French forces during their colonial rule in the Ivory Coast has been returned to the country, more than a century after it was taken.

‎It was seized by colonial authorities in 1916 before being taken to France in 1929, where it was put on display at the Trocadéro Museum and later at the Quai Branly Museum in Paris

Members of the Ebrié community, the talking drum’s original owners, welcomed it home. It is more than three metres (10 ft) long, weighs about 430 kg (68 stone), and is carved from iroko wood.

The return is part of a wider French effort to repatriate African cultural artefacts, a process that began in 2017.

It arrived aboard a specially chartered plane but was not removed from its large wooden crate marked “fragile”.

A traditional group of dancers and several local chiefs were at Abidjan International Airport to receive it.

‎”This is a historic day with lot of emotions,” Ivory Coast’s Culture Minister Françoise Remarck told the BBC.

The sacred talking drum arriving at Abidjan International Airport. PHOTO/@Gouvciofficiel/X

“We are living through a moment of justice and remembrance that finally marks the return of the Djidji Ayôkwé to its land of origin.”

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Francis Tagro, director of the Museum of Civilisations in Abidjan, said the drum would be exhibited “in a place of honour in the heart of the national museum“.

“We are deeply happy and proud to receive this sacred drum. It means so much to us; it will elevate the sense of culture of the young generation,” he told the BBC.

The talking drum, a central piece of Ebrié heritage, traditionally served to warn of danger, mobilise people for war, and summon villages to ceremonies. The ethnic group are based in Abidjan, the Ivory Coast’s largest city.

‎The drum was officially handed back by Paris on 20 February after the French parliament passed a special law authorising its restitution.

The talking drum is the first object on a list of 148 works that the Ivory Coast is seeking to have returned from France and other countries.

France has already returned some of the Abomey royal treasures to Benin and a historic sabre to Senegal. ‎

‎‎As restitution requests from former colonies increase, France’s Senate adopted a framework law on January 29, 2026, to make it easier to remove colonial-era artefacts from French national collections.

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The bill is expected to be discussed shortly by the National Assembly.

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