University of Lausanne study reveals Swiss museums hold thousands of human remains acquired during colonial era, sparking debate about repatriation and ethical collection practices.

"Virtually nothing is known about who acquired these remains, how and under what circumstances this happened and how they ended up in Switzerland."
"Switzerland was institutionally linked to all colonial empires and that Swiss nationals were directly or indirectly active in practically all colonies."
Switzerland confronts a staggering ethical reckoning as a new report exposes the presence of at least 4,175 human remains in its museums. The University of Lausanneās investigation, released this Friday, shatters the quiet neutrality often associated with Swiss cultural institutions. These are not merely artifacts; they are the remains of ancestorsāmostly skullsāacquired during the height of the colonial era. The sheer volume of this collection, uncovered through a questionnaire sent to 34 institutions, signals a critical lapse in historical accountability.
While 26 museums responded to the inquiry, the silence of the remaining eight suggests the actual figure could surge even higher. This discovery places Switzerland squarely in the center of the global debate on decolonization. The report reveals that these remains have been sitting in storage, often uncatalogued and unacknowledged, for decades. As the data comes to light, it forces the nation to look inward at its cultural vaults, transforming them from repositories of knowledge into crime scenes of historical negligence. The magnitude of 4,175 individuals lying in Swiss storage cannot be overstated; it is a deafening call for justice that can no longer be ignored.
The myth of Swiss non-involvement in colonial atrocities is dismantling before our eyes. While Switzerland never held formal colonial territories, the report highlights a pervasive "colonialism without colonies" that allowed Swiss nationals to operate freely across all imperial borders. Unlike the collections of Britain or France, which typically reflect their specific geographic conquests, Swiss vaults house human remains from every corner of the globe. This geographic diversity serves as undeniable proof that Switzerland was institutionally linked to every major colonial empire.
Swiss scientists, explorers, and collectors acted as hubs for an international trade in human bodies, moving data and objects across political lines with impunity. The report explicitly states that Swiss nationals were "directly or indirectly active in practically all colonies," profiting from the power imbalances of the era. This unique position allowed Swiss institutions to amass a collection that is disturbingly universal. The narrative that Switzerland stood apart from colonial exploitation is no longer tenable; the evidence is locked inside the archives of Basel and Zurich, where the highest concentration of these remains is currently held.
A disturbing void of information surrounds these 4,175 individuals. The report underscores a critical failure in record-keeping: virtually nothing is known about who acquired these remains, the horrific circumstances of their theft, or the logistics of their transport to Switzerland. This "provenance gap" is not just a bureaucratic oversight; it is an erasure of identity. The majority of these skeletons, particularly those housed in the heavy-hitting cultural centers of Basel and Zurich, exist in a historical vacuum.
This lack of data paralyzes restitution efforts. Without knowing the specific origin or the "collector" responsible, returning these ancestors to their descendant communities becomes a logistical nightmare. The authors of the report argue that this history is dangerously under-researched. We are staring at a massive collection of human beings stripped of their names and histories, reduced to inventory numbers. The challenge now facing Swiss curators is not just preservation, but forensic historical investigation to reconstruct the broken chains of custody that led these remains from their homelands to Swiss storage lockers.
The time for passive storage is over; the era of active restitution must begin. The University of Lausanne researchers are demanding immediate, decisive action from the Federal Office of Culture. The primary recommendation is a massive expansion of support for provenance researchāfunding the detective work necessary to identify these individuals. But research alone is insufficient. The report calls for the creation of a publicly accessible platform, a digital portal where indigenous people can search for their ancestors, finally bridging the gap between Swiss institutions and the communities they dispossessed.
This push aligns with the 2007 UN General Assembly declaration reaffirming the rights of indigenous peoples to repatriate their ancestors. Switzerland must now move from acknowledging the problem to solving it. The proposed platform would be a significant step toward transparency, allowing descendants to reclaim agency over their heritage. As the pressure mounts, Swiss museums face a clear choice: continue to guard the spoils of a colonial past, or lead the way in ethical restitution and human dignity. The world is watching.