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30859: From Raber Re: 30853: (news) Two Americans detained in Port au Prince (fwd)





From: PM Raber <raber88@zoominternet.net>


Traveling with remains was a common thing not even 10 years ago. The man in charge of the bodies at the state university used to provide (and probably still does, unless the school now provides it) Haitian medical and other health field students with complete skeletons for (in the late 1990's) for 1000 gourdes . A skull only was 200 gourdes.Study groups would pool their money to purchase their study tools. The cadaver caretaker (he also handled the bodies for disection) would just boil a head or a full body, pick the soft tissues off, and deliver fairly fresh but clean bones. Medical students in Haiti can describe the looks and the smell of his business. I know research/medical-type people in the US who used to travel with skulls bought through Haitian students. Since 2001, all luggage arriving from Haiti is now x-rayed. Who knows how many people used to travel with skulls before that. Real bones are very useful for various research, as a 3D reference and for studying anatomy. Those two kids may have gotten some ill advice from people who in the past were able to travel with good quality, cheap bones. Ever since this lady was caught with a mumified skull at the Florida airport, I think that they have cracked down even more. I don't know why they were arrested in Haiti. This must be some sort of agreement with the US. Within Haiti, there does not seem to be a taboo about acquiring skulls inside Haiti. If there is a law about acquisition, it is completley ignored. Maybe there is a law about leaving the country with bones. The US has no federal law prohibiting people to acquire bones. Some states do have such laws. Usually they are there to protect historic Native American bones or old cemetaries.. In those states, people can obtain permits to acquire remains. Florida grants such permits to institutions of higher learning.

This is actually an area where Haiti could enter exportation. This is a niche market where Haiti can be competitive. Adult black skulls and any children's skulls (infant and up) of average quality cost around $600 US a skull. Most of the skulls legally sold in the US are from Asian sources. up to 1987 (when India outlawed exportation) they were from India. Now they are from China. Those run around $300. Full skelettons are 3-4 thousand dollars. An arm with hand or the complete vertebral column only can be $500. One leg bone $75. A little tiny bone in the wrist can be $5. Chinese bones are of lower quality because they are dug out of the ground rather than processed while the body is still fresh. The quality suffers. For years, knowledgeable Americans travelled with Haitian bones. They were high quality with usually full sets of teeth and no signs of past medical interventions. Today in Haiti, many bodies are abandonned by their families due to the cost of funerals. They could be a source of bones for such an industry just as they are a source for the Haitian medical students. Of course the entire industry would need strict regulations but for a country looking fo niche markets, that is one real (though macabre) possibility.