
An Indigenous advocacy group is calling on a Swiss collector who owns culturally significant Indigenous artifacts to ensure the items are return to their original Indigenous owners as he prepares for retirement.
The curator previously had some of his collection on display at the Indian Land Museum in Gossau, Switzerland, before it permanently closed at the end of 2025, according to a Swiss news outlet.
Since the closure, the goods were packed into boxes, and are currently sitting in storage waiting to be sold, according to a news release shared by Bringing Them Home, a grassroots Indigenous organization working to bring the goods back to North America.
“They’re not just things you display like trophies. They are sacred and they are holy to our people, and they need to be looked after with prayer. Proper protocol needs to be taken, and the proper ceremonies need to be done,” said Karl Stone, a councillor with Dakota Tipi First Nation, at a news conference Tuesday.
Sacred pipes, beaded regalia, feathered headdresses, and other culturally significant belongings are among the items listed for sale.
The collection has a total value of around CA$20 million. It also includes guns “believed to be associated with the period of the Battle of the Little Bighorn and the Plains Nations of that era,” the release said.
Bringing Them Home said they have spoken with the collector about keeping the items but have not been able to agree to a price yet.
One of their major concerns is the possibility of the artifacts being sold or auctioned to a private owner who is not interested in sharing their educational or historic value.

Get breaking National news
Get breaking Canada news delivered to your inbox as it happens so you won’t miss a trending story.
Some of the collection is currently listed on a private seller site for collectors.
“He’s willing to work with us. He seems to have a lot of empathy for these artifacts to come back home – to come back to the nations from which they came,” said Gerald Neufeld, a member of Bringing Them Home.
Neufeld was among a group of Indigenous people from Canada who visited the museum and saw the Swiss collection in person before the museum was shut down at the end of last year.
The goods and vestiges will be certified and assessed for pricing before a final sale is completed, if the group can successfully negotiate with the collector, he said.
From there, individual nations will decide whether they want to keep the item or have it displayed in a museum.
Global News reached out to the current owner of the artifacts for a comment. No response was received at the time of publication.
“This is a very important part of the whole healing process for our Indigenous people who live on this land. The time is here that we need to be putting efforts into bringing these home,” Neufeld said.
Bringing Them Home said it is calling on all levels of government in Canada and the U.S., museums and the public to stand behind them as they work to bring the artifacts back to its Indigenous owners.
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.







