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FOR
RETURN
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AGAINST
RETURN
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DOCUMENTS
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By Graham Binns, Chairman of the British Committee (This article was originally published as Appendix C to the British Committee's submission to the House of Commons Select Committee). In 1961 the case was put to Harold Macmillan, who thought it 'a complicated question'.. The Foreign Office re-examined the position. The department head concerned consulted the British Ambassador in Athens, stressing that the sculptures had 'a close association with the history and national life of Greece and that they fall into a small and narrowly restricted category of works of art which should remain in the [Greek] national heritage'. 'It seems to us', he continued, 'that the Elgin Marbles represent a special case to which special arguments apply and which would not necessarily constitute a precedent if it were decided to return them to Greece.' The Ambassador, Sir Roger Allen, agreed. The length of time the marbles had been in London, he wrote, was not sufficient reason to retain them. 'The argument that the marbles are now closely associated with British history and British national life seems to me to be dangerously double-edged.' Nevertheless, Macmillan did not pursue the matter. Again in. the l960s, the writer Cohn Maclnnes conducted a crusade -even suggesting the face-saving solution that the marbles be lent to Greece in perpetuity. He observed: Individuals make disinterested gestures rarely enough, and nations almost never. Yet I have such irrational faith in the ultimate decency of my fellow-countrymen that I cannot believe them for ever incapable of doing the right thing...
The Position Now
The Committee has promoted the arguments for restitution through the media and through exhibitions and debates. It has largely been responsible for ensuring that the true facts of the case are now accessible to the British public.
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