The Council of Indigenous Peoples on Friday held a forum on preserving indigenous culture through cooperation between museums in Taiwan and other countries.
Academics and officials representing the council discussed methods for museums to circulate artifacts for display and use their collections to counter the loss of indigenous cultural memory, the council wrote in a news release.
The forum comprised four events in Taipei, the council said, adding that it was a follow-up to an initiative that began last year to inventory indigenous artifacts in the collections of museums across the country.
National Dong Hwa University conducted the research, while the council sent delegations to Germany and Austria to prepare the groundwork for the project, Education and Culture Department director Yang Cheng-pin (楊正斌) was quoted as saying in the statement.
Strategies to coordinate collecting and displaying artifacts, and working with communities where the objects originated, is an important topic that has gained the attention of museums over the past few years, Yang said.
The council is planning to create a national museum of indigenous culture, which would require in-depth discussion to develop strategies to halt the loss of cultural memory and gain an understanding of indigenous history, he said.
The council would incorporate opinions and suggestions from outside experts who attended the forum into its plans for the national museum, which would play a key role in protecting indigenous history, he said.
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