{"id":41202,"date":"2026-04-21T22:32:27","date_gmt":"2026-04-21T22:32:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/appsaf.apieproject.com\/news\/?p=41202"},"modified":"2026-04-21T22:32:28","modified_gmt":"2026-04-21T22:32:28","slug":"zimbabwe-iconic-stone-birds-are-finally-back-home","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/appsaf.apieproject.com\/news\/2026\/04\/21\/zimbabwe-iconic-stone-birds-are-finally-back-home\/","title":{"rendered":"Zimbabwe: Iconic Stone Birds are finally Back Home"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p id=\"article-123\">Zimbabwe&#8217;s flag, banknotes and coat of arms all feature a stately looking eagle, sitting majestically on a plinth.<br><br>Known as the Zimbabwe Bird, it has long been a symbol of national identity, but behind it lies a complex tale of displacement, colonial plunder and restitution.<br><br>The bird is one of several ancient, treasured sculptures that were taken from Zimbabwe by colonialists and spent decades outside the country&#8217;s borders.<br><br>It was only this week that &#8211; after 137 years away &#8211; the final displaced bird arrived home, a moment Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa described as &#8220;the return of a national icon&#8221;.<br><br>The grey, soapstone carving was repatriated from neighbouring South Africa &#8211; it wound up there having been ripped from its column, then sold to British imperialist Cecil Rhodes.<br><br>On Tuesday, South Africa repatriated the bird, along with eight sets of human remains, previously exhumed in Zimbabwe by colonial researchers and donated to a South African museum.<br><br>The body parts were taken during the late 19th and early 20th Centuries for &#8220;a misguided colonial pseudoscience&#8221; South African Minister of Culture Gayton McKenzie said at a ceremony held to hand over the remains and the bird.<br><br>&#8220;These are not abstractions, but people&#8230; removed from their graves, their communities, and their homeland under the logic that their bodies were data,&#8221; he said.<br><br>Their return is significant for Zimbabwe, which has also been seeking the return of the skulls of late-19th Century anti-colonial heroes, believed to be in the UK.<br><br>This week&#8217;s homecoming comes at a time when former colonial powers are yielding to campaigns to send looted African remains and artefacts back to their home countries.<br><br>The vast majority of returns have come from European countries like France, the Netherlands, Germany and the UK.<br><br>What made this repatriation rare was that it was an African country doing the returning.<br><br>In his speech on Tuesday, McKenzie described the birds as &#8220;unique&#8221; and &#8220;revered&#8221;.<br><br>&#8220;Nothing like them has been discovered anywhere else in the world,&#8221; he said.<br><br>The sculptures were taken from the ruins of Great Zimbabwe, a medieval stone city, from which Zimbabwe gets its name. In fact, Zimbabwe means &#8220;house of stone&#8221; &#8211; and today the country is globally renowned in art circles for its modern stone carvings.<br><br>The Great Zimbabwe site was built between the 11th and 15th Centuries and the striking bird sculptures &#8211; of which eight are known &#8211; were planted on walls and monoliths.<br><br>An air of intrigue surrounds the eagles &#8211; scholars cannot agree on who exactly sculpted them, though some scholars believe they were made by ancestors of the Shona people, who make up the majority of the country&#8217;s current population.<br><br>&#8220;They are the most significant archaeological treasures ever discovered in the country,&#8221; Plan Shenjere-Nyabezi, an archaeology professor at the University of Zimbabwe, tells the BBC.<br><br>&#8220;The Zimbabwe Birds stand as powerful and cherished symbols of our national heritage.&#8221;<br><br>The sculptures vary in shape and sizes &#8211; they range from 25cm (9.8in) to 50cm in height, towering above one metre when measured with their columns.<br><br>Some experts believe the statues depict the bateleur eagle, known as &#8220;chapungu&#8221; in Shona. Others believe the bird is a &#8220;hungwe&#8221;, the African fish eagle.<br><br>The statues have great spiritual meaning for some in Zimbabwe, Edward Matenga, one of Zimbabwe&#8217;s foremost scholars of the sculptures, tells the BBC.<br><br>He says the endangered bateleur eagle is historically &#8220;sacred&#8221; to both the Shona and the minority Venda people.<br><br>The eight birds watched over Great Zimbabwe for hundreds of years. However, in the 19th Century a growing number of European hunters, traders and missionaries began exploring the region prior to colonisation.<br><br>A hunter named Willi Posselt happened upon the birds in 1889 and decided to take the &#8220;best specimen&#8221; &#8211; the very sculpture returned to Zimbabwe on Tuesday.<br><br>According to his own account, local people, armed with guns and spears, initially protested against the bird&#8217;s removal. But Posselt was able to leave with the bird, ripping it from its column after handing over blankets and &#8220;other articles&#8221; in exchange.<br><br>&#8220;I stored the remaining [birds] in a secure place, it being my intention to return and secure them from the natives,&#8221; he wrote.<br><br>Posselt sold the bird to Cecil Rhodes, a powerful imperialist who headed the British South Africa Company and spearheaded the colonisation of modern-day Zimbabwe and Zambia.<br><br>Rhodes used the bird as d\u00e9cor for his grand Cape Town estate and two years later, the British South Africa Company commissioned archaeologist Theodore Bent to return to Great Zimbabwe.<br><br>Bent found the sculptures that Posselt had stored away and transported four of the prized birds to a museum in South Africa.<br><br>A fragment of one other bird ended up further afield &#8211; its pedestal was taken by a German missionary and sold to Berlin&#8217;s Ethnological Museum in 1907.<br><br>But after Zimbabwe became independent in 1980, its authorities launched a campaign to recoup the missing birds, with only two remaining in the country.<br><br>Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe&#8217;s independence leader and long-time president, described their loss as a &#8220;ruthless cultural plunder&#8221;.<br><br>In a peculiar trade, South Africa&#8217;s apartheid government agreed in 1981 to release the four birds it held in a museum in exchange for a huge collection of bees, wasps and ants. The trove, belonging to Zimbabwe&#8217;s Natural History Museum, comprised around 1,000 kinds of insects.<br><br>Then, in 2003, another win. Germany returned the soapstone pedestal that, in Mugabe&#8217;s words, had &#8220;spent almost 100 years in exile&#8221;.<br><br>Getting the last bird back was more of a challenge. When Rhodes died in 1902, his Cape Town home and all its contents were vested to South Africa&#8217;s governor-general &#8211; a role which was later transformed into the national president.<br><br>In 1910, a law named the Rhodes Will Act stated that these possessions should not be sold, let or transferred.<br><br>&#8220;Every time Zimbabwe asked, the 1910 Act was cited,&#8221; McKenzie explained in his speech.<br><br>South Africa finally got round this legal quandary by signing a deal to loan the bird to Zimbabwe for two years.<br><br>McKenzie insists that the bird will never return to South Africa, saying the authorities are undertaking a review of the 1910 Act in order to allow for &#8220;permanent repatriation&#8221;.<br><br>After years of negotiation, Zimbabwe&#8217;s authorities appear to have faith in South Africa&#8217;s pledge. For them, their lost bird has flown home for good.<br><br>Prof Shenjere-Nyabezi echoes this optimism, stating: &#8220;I would say the arrival of this last piece signifies a spiritual homecoming.<br><br>&#8220;The bird is Zimbabwe&#8217;s heritage&#8230; one should not have to travel to other countries to enjoy their own heritage.&#8221;<br><br>Matenga describes the repatriation as a &#8220;win-win situation&#8221; for both Zimbabwe and South Africa.<br><br>&#8220;It is a cathartic process for South Africa,&#8221; he says, &#8220;that they are giving away what is important for another country.&#8221;<br><br>The bird is finally returning to its home at Great Zimbabwe, joining its seven siblings in an on-site museum, for protective purposes.<br><br>When receiving the sculpture, Mnangagwa noted that the bird had arrived home just in time for the anniversary of Zimbabwe&#8217;s independence, on Saturday.<br><br>&#8220;Let the people of Zimbabwe come and witness,&#8221; he said, wearing a woollen scarf bearing the colours of Zimbabwe&#8217;s flag.<br><br>&#8220;Let the children of this great nation see with their own eyes the symbol of their identity and let the world know Zimbabwe is a nation that respects its past.&#8221;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Zimbabwe&#8217;s flag, banknotes and coat of arms all feature a stately looking eagle, sitting majestically on a plinth. Known as the Zimbabwe Bird, it has long been a symbol of national identity, but behind it lies a complex tale of displacement, colonial plunder and restitution. The bird is one of several ancient, treasured sculptures that [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":41203,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[223,2,212],"tags":[7,224,213],"class_list":{"0":"post-41202","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-art","8":"category-featured","9":"category-history","10":"tag-apie-project","11":"tag-art","12":"tag-history"},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Zimbabwe: Iconic Stone Birds are finally Back Home - APIE NEWS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/appsaf.apieproject.com\/news\/2026\/04\/21\/zimbabwe-iconic-stone-birds-are-finally-back-home\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Zimbabwe: Iconic Stone Birds are finally Back Home - APIE NEWS\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Zimbabwe&#8217;s flag, banknotes and coat of arms all feature a stately looking eagle, sitting majestically on a plinth. 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