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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Judge clarifies: Yes, Trump was found to have raped E. Jean Carroll

Judge clarifies: Yes, Trump was found to have raped E. Jean Carroll

Former president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump leaves the opening of his campaign headquarters in Manchester, N.H., last month. (Reba Saldanha/Reuters)


(How can people vote for a man who was found by a jury in a court to have raped a woman and has been accused of sexual assault by 27 woman. No decent human being could support such a person.)


“After Donald Trump was found liable for sexually abusing and defaming E. Jean Carroll, his legal team and his defenders lodged a frequent talking point.

Despite Carroll’s claims that Trump had raped her, they noted, the jury stopped short of saying he committed that particular offense. Instead, jurors opted for a second option: sexual abuse.

“This was a rape claim, this was a rape case all along, and the jury rejected that — made other findings,” his lawyer, Joe Tacopina, said outside the courthouse.

A judge has now clarified that this is basically a legal distinction without a real-world difference. He says that what the jury found Trump did was in fact rape, as commonly understood.

The filing from Judge Lewis A. Kaplan came as Trump’s attorneys have sought a new trial and have argued that the jury’s $5 million verdict against Trump in the civil suit was excessive. The reason, they argue, is that sexual abuse could be as limited as the “groping” of a victim’s breasts.

Kaplan roundly rejected Trump’s motion Tuesday, calling that argument “entirely unpersuasive.”

“The finding that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was ‘raped’ within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she failed to prove that Mr. Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand the word ‘rape,’ ” Kaplan wrote.

He added: “Indeed, as the evidence at trial recounted below makes clear, the jury found that Mr. Trump in fact did exactly that.”

Kaplan said New York’s legal definition of “rape” is “far narrower” than the word is understood in “common modern parlance.”

The former requires forcible, unconsented-to penetration with one’s penis. But he said that the conduct the jury effectively found Trump liable for — forced digital penetration — meets a more common definition of rape. He cited definitions offered by the American Psychological Association and the Justice Department, which in 2012 expanded its definition of rape to include penetration “with any body part or object.”

Kaplan also flatly rejected the Trump team’s suggestion that the conduct Trump was found liable for might have been as limited as groping of the breasts.

The reason? Trump was not accused of that, so the only alleged offense that would have qualified as “sexual abuse” was forced digital penetration. Beyond that, Trump was accused of putting his mouth on Carroll’s mouth and pulling down her tights, which Kaplan noted were not treated as alleged sexual abuse at trial.

“The jury’s finding of sexual abuse therefore necessarily implies that it found that Mr. Trump forcibly penetrated her vagina,” Kaplan wrote, calling it the “only remaining conclusion.”

Kaplan also noted that the verdict form did not ask the jury to decide exactly what conduct Trump had committed, and that neither prosecutors nor Trump’s lawyers had requested it to do so.

“Mr. Trump’s attempt to minimize the sexual abuse finding as perhaps resting on nothing more than groping of Ms. Carroll’s breasts through her clothing is frivolous,” Kaplan wrote.

He added that the jury clearly found that Trump had “ ‘raped’ her in the sense of that term broader than the New York Penal Law definition.”

The motion was a part of Trump’s efforts to appeal the verdict against him. That’s an effort that will apparently continue as he faces a separate defamation lawsuit from Carroll, dealing with claims Trump made about her allegations while he was still president.

But for now, Trump’s effort to push back has led to a rather remarkable clarification that severely undercuts his main talking point.“

Trump’s Family Fortune Originated in a Canadian Gold-Rush Brothel (Three generations of criminals)



"Canadians amused by the improbable presidential run of Donald Trump might be surprised to learn the role their own country played in shaping his story.
Trump's grandfather started the family fortune in an adventure that involved the Klondike gold rush, the Mounties, prostitution and twists of fate that pushed him to New York City.
Friedrich Trump had been in North America a few years when he set out for the Yukon, says an author who's just completed a new edition of her multi-generational family biography.
​That Canadian chapter proved pivotal for the entrepreneurial German immigrant, says Gwenda Blair, author of The Trumps: Three Generations That Built An Empire.
"It allowed him to get together the nest egg he'd come to the United States for," the author and Columbia University journalism professor said in an interview.
"Whether he could've accumulated that much money somewhere else, in that short a period of time, as a young man with no connections, and initially not even English, is certainly ... unlikely."
He'd left Europe in 1885 at age 16, a barber's apprentice whose father died young.
Trump wanted a life outside the barber shop, far from the family-owned vineyards his ancestors had been working since they'd settled in Germany's Kallstadt region in the 1600s carrying the soon-altered surname Drumpf.
He sailed in steerage to join his sister in New York.
Within five years he'd anglicized his name to Frederick; moved to the young timber town of Seattle; and amassed enough cash to buy tables and chairs for a restaurant.
His next big move was heralded by the front page of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer of July 17, 1897, and its exclamatory headline: "Gold! Gold! Gold!"
It described a resplendent scene at the port involving mountains of yellow metal and men returning from the "New Eldorado" with fortunes as high as $100,000.
Trump sold everything and headed north.
A caravan of prospectors arrives at Chilkoot Trail to join the great Gold Rush. (Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
The move to Canada spared him financial disaster. He not only sold off two Seattle eateries, but also land in nearby Monte Cristo, Wash. — right before floods and avalanches destroyed the nearby railroad and development plans for the town were scrapped.
Blair describes his perilous northward journey in early 1898.
After boarding a crowded ship to Alaska, Trump trekked over mountains, through Canadian customs, and to the Yukon River where he had to build a boat from scratch and transport a year's worth of personal supplies.
The worst was a notorious mountain pass. The U.S. National Parks Service estimates 3,000 animals died on the White Pass, with many bones still visible today in its so-called Dead Horse Gulch.
"Owners whipped horses, donkeys, mules, oxen, and dogs until they dropped. The bodies were not buried or even moved," Blair writes.
"Travellers ... had no choice but to walk over the remains. As the months went by, the walls of the pass were stained dark red from the blood."
Restoring the Tagish role in the Klondike gold rush
Gold rush links between El Dorado and B.C. highlighted in new exhibit
Trump smelled opportunity.
He opened a canteen along the route, Blair says, where weary travellers likely stopped for a bite of Arctic roadkill. There are records for similar establishments along the route, Blair writes: "A frequent dish was fresh-slaughtered, quick-frozen horse."
This established a pattern for Trump's Canadian business model.
It's summed up in one chapter title: "Mining the Miners."
Unlike other gold-crazed migrants, Blair wrote, "[Trump] realized that the best way to get [rich] was to lay down his pick and shovel and pick up his accounting ledger."
'Liquor and sex'
In his three years in Canada, Trump opened the Arctic Restaurant and Hotel in two locations with a partner — first on Bennett Lake in northern B.C., and then moving it to Whitehorse, Yukon.
Their two-storey wood-framed establishment gained a reputation as the finest eatery in the area, Blair said — offering salmon, duck, caribou, and oysters.
It offered more than food.
"The bulk of the cash flow came from the sale of liquor and sex," Blair wrote. She cited newspaper ads referring obliquely to prostitution — mentioning private suites for ladies, and scales in the rooms so patrons could weigh gold if they preferred to pay for services that way.
He had made money; perhaps even more unusual in the Yukon, he had also kept it and departed with a substantial nest-egg.
- Gwenda Blair, author
One Yukon Sun writer moralized about the backroom goings-on: "For single men the Arctic has the best restaurant," he wrote, "but I would not advise respectable women to go there to sleep as they are liable to hear that which would be repugnant to their feelings and uttered, too, by the depraved of their own sex."
The Mounties initially tolerated the rowdiness. There were exceptions, according to the legendary Canadian writer Pierre Berton. People faced forced labour or banishment from town if they cheated at cards; made a public ruckus; or partied on the Lord's Day.
"Saloons and dance halls, theatres and business houses were shut tight one minute before midnight on Saturday," Berton wrote in "Klondike Fever."
"Two minutes before twelve the lookout at the faro table would take his watch from his pocket and call out: 'The last turn, boys!"'
'I wouldn't call him a pimp'
Trump acted as cook, bouncer, waiter.
But Blair cautions: "I wouldn't call him a pimp."
She said backroom ribaldry was part of the restaurant package in those towns, and it's not clear how the arrangement worked: "As somebody trying to attract business to his restaurant, of course he would have liquor. Of course he would arrange easy access to women. A pimp is, I think, a different business model."
By early 1901, trouble was brewing.
The Mounties announced plans to banish prostitution, and curb gambling and liquor. Trump quarrelled with his partner. Gold strikes were getting scarcer.
"The boom was over, Frederick Trump realized," Blair wrote. "He had made money; perhaps even more unusual in the Yukon, he had also kept it and departed with a substantial nest-egg."
He returned to Germany with US$582,000 in today's currency, and found a wife. But he was greeted as a draft-dodger for being away and becoming a U.S. citizen during his military years.
So he was deported from his own country. He boarded a ship for New York, his wife pregnant with Donald's dad.
The elder Trump died of pneumonia in 1918, leaving behind some real estate. His son built the empire, his grandson the global brand.
Ironically, their heir is now running for president on a platform of mass-deportation. But Donald and grandpa share some traits — an entrepreneurial spirit, and formative youthful adventures in Canada.
Donald met his first wife, Ivana, at the Montreal Olympics".

Trump’s Family Fortune Originated in a Canadian Gold-Rush Brothel

Trump's Father Got Arrested Too, Once During Ku Klux Klan Riot - Business Insider

Donald Trump isn't the first Trump to get arrested. His father, Fred, was arrested twice, reports say — once at a Ku Klux Klan riot, and another time over building code violations.

A black and white headshot of Fred Trump next to a colour picture of Donald Trump speaking into a microphone while standing front of an American flag.
Rita Barros/Getty Images and Joe Raedle/Getty Images
  • Trump was arraigned on Tuesday and faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.
  • His father, Fred Trump, was arrested once in 1927 and again in 1976, per archived news reports.
  • The former president has denied Fred Trump's 1927 arrest and said that he was unaware of the second.

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Former President Donald Trump was indicted on Thursday and arraigned in New York on Tuesday, making him the first US president to be charged with a crime.

However, he's not the first person in his family to be arrested, according to archived news reports.

His father, Fred Trump, was a real estate mogul who was detained by the police once in 1927 and another time in 1976, per newspaper articles published in those years.

Donald Trump wasn't born when the first arrest occurred, but he was 30 and working for his father's firm at the time of the second, The Washington Post's Gillian Brockell reported.

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1927 arrest: Ku Klux Klan riot, New York City

Fred Trump was arrested in 1927 during a Ku Klux Klan riot in Queens, New York, on Memorial Day, per The New York Times.

That day, 1,000 Klansmen marched in Queens to decry the deaths of two Italian fascists in the city, The Times wrote. They'd earlier littered the streets with handbills accusing the police of beating "Native-born Protestant Americans," and called for residents to "take your stand in defense of the fundamental principles of your country."

"Liberty and Democracy have been trampled upon when native born Protestant Americans dare to organize to protect one flag, the American flag; one school, the public school, and one language, the English language; also when they march peaceably through the streets in honor of their forefathers," the handbills read, per The Times.

The Klansmen were met by some 100 policemen, and both parties clashed in a "free-for-all battle," The Times wrote. When the dust settled, Fred Trump was one of seven men arrested, per The Times.

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It's unclear in the report what role he played in the riot. "Fred Trump of 175-24 Devonshire Road, Jamaica, was discharged," is all The Times mentioned of his name.

A 2015 report by BoingBoing.net said the New York City police department didn't have records of the arrest, since it did not preserve arrest reports that went back as far as 1927.

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But in 2016, The Washington Post's Philip Bump identified the former president's father in a 1930 census, which showed that he lived at the same address as the one cited by The Times.

In a 2015 interview with the Daily Mail, Trump denied the 1927 report about his father's arrest.

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"This is ridiculous. He was never arrested. He has nothing to do with this. This never happened," he said. "This is nonsense and it never happened. This never happened. Never took place. He was never arrested, never convicted, never even charged. It's a completely false, ridiculous story. He was never there! It never happened. Never took place."

1976 arrest: Housing code violations, Maryland

Fred Trump was also arrested in Maryland for not complying with housing code violations, according to a 1976 report by The Washington Post's Karen DeYoung.

Officials arrested Fred Trump after he flew into Prince George's County from New York in September that year, the Post reported. The businessman owned a 504-unit complex in the county called Gregory Estates and was at the property when he was taken into custody, per the outlet.

Local authorities said they found the property had broken several regulations, including violations for broken windows, defective rain gutters, and a failure to install fire extinguishers, DeYoung wrote.

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It was rare for the county to make arrests for building code violations, an inspector supervisor named Joseph Healey told DeYoung at the time.

"We probably haven't issued four arrest warrants in the past five years," he said, adding that the county would have worked with owners who made an effort to comply with regulations.

But the county housing department's chief inspector, C.H. Bennett, signed the arrest warrant after speaking on the phone a few times with Fred Trump, The Post reported.

Fred Trump was eventually released on a $1,000 bond and was free to return to New York, the Post reported.

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Henry Arrington, the mayor of Seat Pleasant, Maryland, at the time of Fred Trump's arrest, told the Post in a separate 2016 report that he received a call from jail, where the irate businessman was being held.

"Come get me out of jail," the businessman said over the phone, per Arrington.

Donald Trump told the Post in 2016 that he was unaware of his father's 1976 arrest.

The younger Trump now faces 34 low-level felony counts of falsifying business records, filed against him by the Manhattan district attorney's office. He is set to appear in court again on December 4, just two months before the Republican primaries officially kick off the 2024 presidential campaign.

Notably, Trump isn't the first US president to be arrested. President Ulysses S. Grant was arrested in 1872 for speeding in a horse-drawn carriage. He was released on a bail worth $500 today.

A representative for Trump did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider sent outside regular business hours."

Trump's Father Got Arrested Too, Once During Ku Klux Klan Riot - Business Insider

FBI Released Report From Trump's Housing Discrimination Allegations - Business Insider

The FBI released hundreds of pages related to a 1970s housing discrimination lawsuit against Trump

"The FBI made available 389 pages from a 1970s investigation of racial discrimination accusations against Trump Management Company, a real-estate business linked to President Donald Trump at the time.

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A civil-rights lawsuit brought by the Justice Department against Donald Trump and his father Fred Trump in 1973 claimed that African-Americans and Puerto Ricans were prevented from renting apartments from Trump.

The heavily redacted records of dozens of tenants and employees of Trump Management Company provided an overwhelming amount of information on the matter, however, one statement from a rental supervisor stood out:

"I asked Fred Trump what his policy was regarding minorities and he said it was absolutely against the law to discriminate. At a later time ... Fred Trump told me not to rent to blacks. He also wanted me to get rid of the blacks that were in the building by telling them cheap housing was available for them at only $500 down payment, which Trump would offer to pay himself. Trump didn't tell me where this housing was located."

He also gave this account after a colleague received a black couple's application:

"I thought the black couple would be judged acceptable as tenants based on [employment and weekly salary]. However, [redacted] just told me they're blacks and and that's that. I believe that [redacted] and others working at the rental office used a code on the top of the front page of the application to distinguish blacks from whites."

In a separate report from The Washington Post, the government alleged that Trump employees marked minority applicants with codes, such as “No. 9” or “C” for “colored.”

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Trump Place
A man removes letters from the awning of the former Trump Place in New York, Nov. 16, 2016. Donald Trump's name is being stripped off three luxury apartment buildings after hundreds of tenants signed a petition saying they were embarrassed to live in a place associated with Trump. Seth Wenig/AP

Another interview from a former doorman of a Trump building in Brooklyn provided the following account:

"[Redacted] told me that if a black person came to 2650 Ocean Parkway and inquired about an apartment for rent, and he, that is [redacted] was not there at the time, that I should tell him that the rent was twice as much as it really was, in order that he could not afford the apartment."

Although some of the allegations were damning, the majority of those interviewed in the investigation said they were unaware of discrimination, according to Politico.

Trump eventually filed a $100 million countersuit, accusing the government of defamation, alleging that they were saying “such outrageous lies.” Trump said that although the company wanted to avoid renting to welfare applicants, he'd never discriminated based on race.  

In 1975, Trump agreed to a consent decree, whereby no admission of wrongdoing would be given, however, his management company was ordered to take out ads telling ethnic minorities that they were welcome to seek housing at Trump properties."

FBI Released Report From Trump's Housing Discrimination Allegations - Business Insider

FBI releases files on Trump apartments' race discrimination probe in '70s - POLITICO

FBI releases files on Trump apartments' race discrimination probe in '70s

10_donald_trump_21_ap_1160.jpg

The records, posted on the FBI's Freedom of Information Act website, include a 1974 interview with a former doorman at a Trump building in Brooklyn. | AP Photo

"The FBI has released nearly 400 pages of records on an investigation the bureau conducted in the 1970s into alleged racial discrimination in the rental of apartments from President Donald Trump's real estate company.

The files detail dozens of interviews the bureau conducted with Trump building tenants, management and employees, seeking indications that minority tenants were steered away from housing complexes.

Most of those interviewed said they were not aware of any discrimination. However, some of the records recount the stories of black rental applicants who said they were told no apartments were available, while whites sent to check on the same apartments were offered leases.

The records, posted on the FBI's Freedom of Information Act website, include a 1974 interview with a former doorman at a Trump building in Brooklyn.

A supervisor "told me that if a black person came to 2650 Ocean Parkway and inquired about an apartment for rent, and he, that is [redacted] was not there at the time, that I should tell him that the rent was twice as much as it really was, in order that he could not afford the apartment," the ex-doorman said.

Many of the accounts of discrimination appear to have originated with the National Urban League, which relayed the information to the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. Some of those complaints are barely legible, and many of the records are heavily redacted.

In October 1973, the Civil Rights Division filed a lawsuit against Trump Management Company, Donald Trump and his father Fred Trump, alleging that African-Americans and Puerto Ricans were systematically excluded from apartments. The Trumps responded with a $100 million countersuit accusing the government of defamation.

Donald Trump denied any racial discrimination, but said his managers tried to weed out certain kinds of tenants. “What we didn’t do was rent to welfare cases, white or black," Trump wrote in a 1987 book.

The Trumps and their company entered into a consent decree settling the litigation in 1975. The agreement contained no admission of wrongdoing, but required the Trump firm to institute a series of safeguards to make sure apartments were rented without regard to race, color, religion, sex or national origin.

Josh Gerstein is a senior reporter for POLITICO."

FBI releases files on Trump apartments' race discrimination probe in '70s - POLITICO

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

‘Dahomey’ Celebrated Looted Art’s Return. What Happened Next? - The New York Times

‘Dahomey’ Celebrated Looted Art’s Return. What Happened Next?

Since the documentary’s cameras stopped rolling, plans for a new museum to showcase the treasures have stalled, and the artifacts are once again off limits to the public in Benin.


In a film still, a man in a white hat and white jacket stands in front of a carved wooden statue.
“Dahomey,” directed by Mati Diop, follows most significant repatriation to date of artworks from a former colonial power to an African country.Mubi

Throughout the movie “Dahomey,” the eerie voice of a 19th century West African king emerges from the depths of history.

“They have named me 26,” the voice says, imagining the thoughts of King Béhanzin, who died in 1906. Onscreen, museum curators label and package a wooden sculpture of the king, preparing it to leave France and return home, to what is now Benin. “I’m torn between the fear of not being recognized by anyone,” the voice says, “and not recognizing anything.”

When 26 artworks looted by France in the 19th century traveled back to Benin in 2021, art historians hailed the return as a groundbreaking move that would pave the way for a steadier flow of repatriations.

It was the most significant repatriation to date of artworks from a former colonial power to an African country, and the French-Senegalese filmmaker Mati Diop was there to film it for “Dahomey,” her experimental documentary that won the top prize at the Berlin International Film Festival earlier this year, and which came out in U.S. movie theaters last week.

Diop’s camera traveled with the artifacts from the galleries of the Quai Branly museum in Paris to Benin’s presidential palace, where 200,000 visitors admired them over just a few months. King Béhanzin’s voice is one of a few fantastical touches she added in an otherwise nonfiction film.

Some of the 26 works on display at the Benin’s presidential palace, in 2022.Carmen Abd Ali for The New York Times

“These returns open up the possibility of building new African societies,” Diop said in an interview this month. They could encourage the teaching of new narratives in schools, as well as broader historical discussions, she said.

In the movie, visitors knelt, cried and whispered in front of the returned treasures, including wooden sculptures, royal thrones and other sacred objects known as “assens” and still revered to this day. “Dahomey” depicts these moments with a delicate mix of respect and intimacy.

But three years after the cameras stopped rolling, the artworks are once again off limits to the public in Benin.

The temporary exhibition wrapped up in 2022, and the artworks were moved to a storage room in the presidential palace. The opening of a planned museum to showcase them keeps being postponed.

This has fueled questions about the intentions of the country’s president, Patrice Talon, in bringing back the treasures.

Talon has vowed to use culture and tourism to boost economic growth in Benin, a nation of 13 million people, neighboring Nigeria, that was a French colony until it became independent in 1960, at first under the name Dahomey.

Four museums are currently under construction in the country, but the president has also muzzled political opposition and independent journalists, leaving little space for an open discussion about what should be done with the returned artifacts.

“We must be critical and have high expectations toward the African leaders repatriating these artifacts,” Mati Diop, the director of “Dahomey” said. “We’re not here to say, ‘He’s getting them back, he’s a hero.’”Gabriella Angotti-Jones for The New York Times

In “Dahomey,” Ms. Diop gathered some Beninese college students for a debate on the significance of the treasures’ return, and their exchanges are some of the movie’s most enlightening moments.

One student says that the return of 26 artifacts is insignificant compared to the thousands of looted pieces still kept by France. Another reminds the audience that they’re conducting the debate in French, the former colonizer’s language.

Intellectuals, art historians and others in Benin have questioned whether a Western-style museum built with funding from France’s development agency and guidance from French organizations, is really the best setting to exhibit the objects.

In interviews last week, some of those who participated in the student debates said their questions remained unanswered.

One of them, Yvon Kossou-Yovo, said he appreciated Talon’s will to build museums — an issue that three Beninese and Western officials with direct knowledge of the president’s thinking said was one of the topics he followed most closely.

College students debating the importance of the repatriated works in “Dahomey.”Mubi

Yet Kossou-Yovo, who has since graduated and is now a museum guide in Western Benin, added: “The government wants to show the world that it’s working on these issues, but does it listen to its own population?”

Another debate participant, Didier Nassègandé, who now works as a theater director, said it felt as if the artworks had been confiscated by the government. “It’s like a World Cup,” he said. “We’re invited to celebrate the return, like a victory parade for a trophy, but then few people have access to the cup.”

Beninese officials say they need time to build a museum for the treasures and hundreds of other artifacts in Abomey, the city in southern Benin that French colonial forces raided in 1892, ending the reign of King Béhanzin.

How the museum will tell the story of how the king and previous rulers of the Dahomey kingdom collaborated with Western powers for centuries in the slave trade, remains unclear.

Alain Godonou, Talon’s adviser for heritage and museums, said it would take years to hire the more than 300 art curators, museum guides, librarians and other workers needed to staff the planned museums.

Islamist insurgents in Benin also posed security challenges for the project, he said. “Some places can become targets for ill-intentioned people where there are crowds,” Godonou said, adding that the museum had been redesigned to prevent attacks by ramming truck.

Alain Godonou, who helped curate the exhibition of repatriated artifacts in 2022, giving a tour to visitors.Carmen Abd Ali for The New York Times

Still, construction isn’t scheduled to begin until next year at the earliest, and Godonou said that a plan to temporarily exhibit the artifacts in another museum in the meantime had been dropped. He added that he inspects the treasures once a month at the presidential palace, and said they would likely be exhibited again, temporarily, in Cotonou, Benin’s largest city.

Yet even while the artifacts remain behind closed doors, the impact of their return can be felt elsewhere.

They have put Benin’s ancient and contemporary art scenes on the map of West Africa’s thriving art ecosystem. This year, for the first time, the country hosted a pavilion at the Venice Biennale, which brought some wider international recognition.

On a recent afternoon, Benjamin Déguénon a multidisciplinary artist, sat in his studio in the city of Ouidah, southern Benin, surrounded by dozens of freshly finished wooden sculptures inspired by the artworks France gave back.

Déguénon had hammered some nails into his own statues, to reflect, he said, the effect that the 1892 raid and the following decades of colonization had on the artworks and the people of Benin.

“These are wounds that the Beninese people will never forget,” Déguénon said.

At the Africa Design School in Contou, Benin’s capital, students are creating 3-D models of the returned treasures in augmented reality, as well as card games and mobile apps for young audiences to learn about Benin’s cultural heritage.

Work by Chloé Quenum at Benin’s first ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale, in April.Matteo de Mayda for The New York Times

Explaining that history to young visitors would also be a priority for the new museum in Abomey, said Gabin Djimassè, an art historian who sits on the committee overseeing the planned displays there.

Young Beninese people were “not used to visiting museums, but we have to show them how important these objects are for their own history, so they make them part of their identity,” Djimassè said.

That reckoning won’t affect young people only, Djimassè said. “We learned with texts and guidebooks often written by the French, or with a French perspective,” Djimassè, 66, said of his generation of art historians.

“We’re rewriting our country’s history in a constant back and forth,” he added, “And that takes time.”

Flore Nobimé contributed reporting from Abomey and Contou."

‘Dahomey’ Celebrated Looted Art’s Return. What Happened Next? - The New York Times