Heritage piety departs ever farther from reality. High-minded
admonitions broaden the gulf between what happens to cultural property and
what virtuous stewards feel should happen. Ever more of our patrimony gets
looted, destroyed, mutilated, shorn of context, hidden from scrutiny,
inadequately stored, poorly conserved, eBayed. Merryman cites three
causes: the animus of UNESCO and archaeology against marketing cultural
property, the sanguine view that trafficking abuse can be quashed by state
fiat and moral suasion, and excessive constraint against heritage export
by blanket diktats from source nations (and tribes and ethnic groups).
These evils endure because heritage stewards commonly subscribe to four
underlying sacrosanct fictions. (1) The heritage of all humanity deserves
to be preserved in toto. (2) Cultural heritage matters above all for the
information it can yield. (3) Collecting is reprehensible; it must be
circumscribed if not outlawed. (4) Nations and tribes are enduring
entities with sacred rights to time-honored legacies. I show why these
views are mistaken yet remain embedded in heritage philosophy and
protocol. In particular, although heritage is piously declared the legacy
of all mankind, chauvinist sentiment continues to impede internationalism,
partly because it buttresses the credentials of those in charge, who are
forced into moral postures that promise unachievable stewardship. National
and local self-esteem are holy writ for UNESCO and other cultural property
agencies. Equating heritage with identity justifies every group's
claim to the bones, the belongings, the riddles, and the refuse of every
forebear back into the mists of time. All that stands in the way of
everyone's reunion with all their ancestors and ancestral things is
its utter impossibility. Heritage professionals once seen as selfless are
now targets of suspicion, often thought backward looking, deluded,
self-seeking, or hypocritical. Small wonder that militant reformers who
seek to suppress illicit cultural property dealings by treaties, court
decisions, government fiats, and the moral artillery of shame and guilt
are viewed with an increasingly cynical eye.