A woke curator at a University of California museum has said that staff speak with inanimate Native American artifacts to give them company at the request of tribes.

Allison Fischer-Olson spoke during a webinar about the Fowler Museum's efforts to comply with requests from natives to interact with inanimate objects. 

The seminar focused on a law, called the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which requires public institutions to offer to return Native American human remains to their descendants.

Under Joe Biden's administration in 2024, NAGPRA was expanded to stipulate that public universities must 'consult' tribes about 'culturally appropriate storage, treatment, and handling of all ancestors and cultural items', Fischer-Olson explained.

When asked to expand on 'culturally appropriate care' of the items, she said that tribes sometimes ask university staff to 'visit' and 'talk to' artifacts. 

'Their communities know best in terms of how we should be caring for them while they are here with us,' said Fischer-Olson, who is also the college's repatriation coordinator.

'Sometimes we are asked to periodically visit and talk to cultural items that may be considered relatives and shouldn't be left alone or be so isolated,' she added. 

Under the NAGPRA law, more than 760 cultural artifacts were returned from the Fowler Museum last month, according to the College Fix.

Allison Fischer-Olson, the UCLA repatriation coordinator and curator of Native American cultures at Fowler Museum, said on February 10 'Sometimes we are asked to periodically visit and talk to cultural items that may be considered relatives and shouldn't be left alone or be so isolated'

Allison Fischer-Olson, the UCLA repatriation coordinator and curator of Native American cultures at Fowler Museum, said on February 10 'Sometimes we are asked to periodically visit and talk to cultural items that may be considered relatives and shouldn't be left alone or be so isolated'

'I feel really grateful to be in the role I'm in within the museum and be able to really call out and speak to some of the unethical practices that museums and institutions like UCLA have engaged in previously,' Fischer-Olson told ABC 7 in 2024 (Fowler Museum Pictured)

'I feel really grateful to be in the role I'm in within the museum and be able to really call out and speak to some of the unethical practices that museums and institutions like UCLA have engaged in previously,' Fischer-Olson told ABC 7 in 2024 (Fowler Museum Pictured) 

'We must make a good faith effort to incorporate any of these wishes articulated to us from tribes,' Fischer-Olson continued. 

'And we must seek free prior and informed consent prior to any access, any exhibition, any research on NAGPRA eligible ancestors or cultural items.'

Fischer-Olson, who is the curator of Native American cultures, described her duties under NAGPRA as 'a lot of administrative work' and speaking with tribes.

She also told ABC 7 in a 2024 interview about her position for an article about helping Native Americans reclaim their ancestral remains.

'I feel really grateful to be in the role I'm in within the museum and be able to really call out and speak to some of the unethical practices that museums and institutions like UCLA have engaged in previously,' she said. 

'And actually have an avenue for starting to right those wrongs, and also to ensure that we are putting processes and practices in place to make sure that we do not do them again.'

In the seminar, Fischer-Olson went into detail on operations at the Fowler Museum on February 10 and on some of the conditions Native American tribes request

In the seminar, Fischer-Olson went into detail on operations at the Fowler Museum on February 10 and on some of the conditions Native American tribes request

Also discussed was the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) a law enacted in the 1990s to return Native American human remains to their tribes, but has come under fire recently for abuse of power

Also discussed was the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) a law enacted in the 1990s to return Native American human remains to their tribes, but has come under fire recently for abuse of power

The curator is responsible for ensuring consultation with tribes, repatriation, disposition, and tribal access to Human Remains and Cultural Items, according to her biography on the museum's website.

A virtual tour of the museum shows a piece by Lazaro Arvizu Jr. titled Sand Acknowledgement.

The piece by Arvizu is his response to performative land acknowledgements that yield no notable outcomes.

A land acknowledgement is an increasingly common practice that recognizes an area as the traditional homeland of indigenous peoples.

The Daily Mail has reached out to Allison Fischer-Olson for comment.