For more than a century, they sat in quiet Vatican vaults — unseen, untouched, and far from the people to whom they truly belonged.

This week, dozens of sacred Indigenous artifacts finally began their journey home.

Inside the wooden crates were more than 60 cultural treasures taken from First Nations, Inuit, and Métis communities in Canada over 100 years ago.

Among them: a rare Inuit sealskin kayak, painstakingly crafted by hand, a vessel that once carried both survival and identity across Arctic waters.

These pieces were never “museum objects.”

They were living parts of cultures — taken during an era when Indigenous traditions were suppressed, families were torn apart, and communities were stripped of the very items that held their stories.

For decades, they remained in the Vatican Museums, locked away in collections most people never even knew existed.

Now, after years of advocacy and healing efforts led by Indigenous leaders, the Vatican has agreed to return them.

Elders and community representatives say the return isn’t simply about objects — it’s about restoring memory, reconnecting families with ancestral craftsmanship, and healing wounds that have spanned generations.

These items once traveled thousands of miles without consent.

Now, for the first time in over a century, they are traveling back with purpose — and with honor.

A kayak made from sealskin.

Ceremonial tools.

Cultural objects woven from skill, survival, and spirit.

Pieces that were taken during a painful chapter of history… finally allowed to return to the hands that created them.

A homecoming long overdue.

A small but powerful step toward truth, respect, and reconciliation.