Hundreds of people lined a street in Cairo, Egypt, in April. They watched a parade of military trucks drive through the Egyptian capital. The vehicles carried the mummies of 22 ancient Egyptians. The pharaohs and other royalty were heading to their new home at the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
The bodies were mummified more than 3,000 years ago. In ancient Egypt, people often carefully wrapped up the bodies of the dead to prevent them from rotting away. They believed that a person needed his or her body in the afterlife.
For more than a century, people have visited museums around the world to see mummies and learn more about the people of ancient Egypt.
But many museums are rethinking whether or not mummies are too sacred—or too scary—to display. The Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum in Baltimore, Maryland, is removing a mummy exhibit this year. Sanchita Balachandran is the museum’s associate director. She says showing the mummy no longer feels right to the staff.
“We are really trying to think more carefully about how to be responsible to people of the past,” she says.
Hundreds of people lined a street in Cairo, Egypt, in April. They watched a parade of military trucks drive through the Egyptian capital. The vehicles carried the mummies of 22 ancient Egyptians. The pharaohs and other royalty were heading to their new home. It was at the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
The bodies were mummified more than 3,000 years ago. In ancient Egypt, people often carefully wrapped up the bodies of the dead. This was to prevent them from rotting away. They believed that a person needed his or her body in the afterlife.
For more than a century, people have visited museums around the world to see mummies. They also go to learn more about the people of ancient Egypt.
But many museums are rethinking whether or not mummies are too sacred—or too scary—to display. The Johns Hopkins Archaeological Museum in Baltimore, Maryland, is removing a mummy exhibit this year. Sanchita Balachandran is the museum’s associate director. She says showing the mummy no longer feels right to the staff.
“We are really trying to think more carefully about how to be responsible to people of the past,” she says.