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These pages explain - - Our
direct involvement with UNESCO
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The UK’s recent ratification of the 1970 Convention on Illicit Trade of
Cultural Property and the associated 1995 UNIDROIT Convention on Stolen
or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects.
- Other relevant heritage related UNESCO
Conventions or Charters
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Recent heritage news from UNESCO and information sources via Web links
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Current
Status
The UNESCO
Convention has been reconsidered during the 1990s, mainly because the
1993 Directive of the European Union on the Return of Cultural Objects
unlawfully removed from the territory of a Member State and its
complementary Regulation led a number of States to revise their
national legislation in ways which made it more compatible with the
UNESCO Convention.
Many of these States had become very concerned about their own problems
of illicit traffic as theft of cultural property increased despite high
security in cultural institutions and the number of losses from museum
reserves, dealers; galleries, libraries, churches and private dwellings
became disquieting. For their own purposes, therefore, they needed to
look again at available instruments to control illicit trafficking.
Moreover, the return of freedom of
movement across the borders of the former Eastern bloc has led to the
massive export of important and less important cultural objects from
those countries which sought the co-operation of their Western European
counterparts to counteract this haemorrhage.
Other interregional organisations also
began to develop co-operative frameworks. To mention just one: the
Commonwealth (54 countries) has developed a model law on reciprocal
enforcement of export controls of cultural property (theft is
considered to be already adequately covered by Common Law).
Direct Involvement
The
Institute was represented on the Culture Committee of UNESCO UK from
its establishment in late 1999 until the termination of all the UK
Committees by the Secretary of State for International Development in
March 2003.
Following a review of the UNESCO UK
National Commission now agreement on the way forward for UNESCO UK
could be reached and consequently the National Commission was suspended
and the UNESCO Secretariat was dissolved. Provision of advice and
comment on draft UNESCO programmes to the relevant government
departments and other government public bodies is not being undertaken
at this point.
The Culture Committees remit is to:
- facilitate
links between civil society in the field of culture within the UK and
UNESCO, and through UNESCO, civil society in countries around the
world;
- arrange appropriate dissemination of
information within the field of culture on UNESCO's objectives,
programmes and activities so as to engage public interest in the work
and value of UNESCO;
- promote those activities
of UNESCO in the field of culture which compliment and give added value
to domestic cultural policies, and to identify and promote UK practice
and experience of relevance, and benefit to other UNESCO Member States.
During
its existence, the Committee concentrated mainly on questions of
cultural diversity; culture and development; emerging intangible
heritage policy (driven partly by UNESCO centrally in Paris) and
implications for the ratification by the UK Government of the 1970
UNESCO Convention on the Means of Preventing the Illicit Import, Export
and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property (following the House of
Commons Culture Select Committee report Cultural Property: Return
Illicit Trade in September 2000).
A recent private
members Bill by Richard Allen MP for Sheffield Hallam, supported by the
Government and entitled Dealing in Cultural Objects (Offences) Bill
would provide the legislative basis for implementing the 1970
Convention and has a good chance of becoming law.
Despite the suspension of the Committee - prior to its abolition - the
Institute continued to co-operate with and support the UK Secretariat.
IHBC recently made a detailed submission on the Evaluation of the
Action Plan stemming from the Inter-governmental Stockholm 1998
Conference on Culture and Development at the request of the
Secretariat. This was acknowledged to be invaluable to its intended
response and demonstrated how the recommendations of DCMS’ A Force for
Our Future was delivering UK heritage actions related to the
international agenda.
These IHBC Web pages
will aim to continue to disseminate information and engage public
interest in the heritage aspects of UNESCO in so far as they affect the
UK.
Bob
Kindred MBE IHBC is the Institute's representative on the UNESCO UK
Culture Committee
e-mail:
unesco@ihbc.org.uk
THE 1970 UNESCO CONVENTION ON THE
MEANS OF PROHIBITING AND PREVENTING THE ILLICIT IMPORT, EXPORT AND
TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF CULTURAL PROPERTY • Adopted by the General
Conference of UNESCO on 14 November 1970
• Currently, 91 States Parties
to the Convention and a number of States with important art markets are
considering ratification
• Non-retroactivity: only applicable to cultural objects
stolen or illicitly exported from one State Party to another State
Party after the date of entry into force of the Convention for both
States concerned
• Definition of cultural property (Articles 1 and 4): very
wide definition adopted, but property has to be explicitly designated
by the State as important for its archaeology, prehistory, history,
literature, art or science
• Domestic protective measures to be adopted by States Parties
(Article 5):
- draft
appropriate national legislation
-
establish national services for the protection of cultural
heritage
- promote
museums, libraries, archives
-
- encourage adoption of codes of conduct for antique dealers
- implement educational
programmes to develop respect for cultural heritage
• Control movement of
cultural property (Articles 6 to 9):
- introduce a system of export
certificates
-
prohibit the export of cultural property unless it is accompanied by an
export certificate
- prevent museums from buying objects exported from another
State Party without an export certificate
- prohibit the import of
objects stolen from museums, religious institutions or public monuments
- penal sanctions to be
imposed on any person contravening these prohibitions
- emergency import bans
may be adopted when the cultural heritage of a State Party is seriously
endangered by intense looting of archaeological and ethnological
artefacts
-
require art dealers to maintain a register of the exact origin of each
object they purchase
• Return of stolen cultural property (Article 7):
- at the request of the
State Party of origin, another State Party will seize and return
cultural property on its territory stolen from a museum, religious
institution or public monument
- the request has to be made
through diplomatic channels
- the object has to be
documented as being part of the inventory of the institution
- the requesting State
has to pay just compensation to an owner who has purchased the object
in good faith or holds a title which is valid according to national law
- the requesting State
has to provide all the evidence to support its claim
Its Drafting and Provisions
The UNESCO Convention on the Means
of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer
of Cultural Property 1970 was the first international legal instrument
to tackle these issues. Discussion had taken place since the beginning
of the 20th century about the problem of illicit traffic, particularly
in respect of antiquities. The Protocol to the Convention for the
Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict (the
Hague Convention) 1954 covered the looting of cultural property in case
of armed conflict. Incidentally, it is surprising to hear that the
UNIDROIT and UNESCO Conventions are impossible to adopt in countries
which have already become party to the 1954 Protocol, an instrument
which has more onerous obligations in respect of seizure and return
than either of the later Conventions.
It was not until 1964 that the first
instrument to deal with illicit traffic in peacetime was agreed to: the
UNESCO Recommendation on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the
Illicit Export, Import and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property.
This Recommendation provides standards for the national States;
administration of cultural heritage to avoid market-driven damage and
loss.
The next step
was the drafting of a Convention to deal with the international
dimensions of the problem. Understandably, the Convention was
controversial. At that stage there were still collecting institutions
which doubted the extent of illicit trafficking and the degree to which
it entered into the licit trade. States, which saw themselves as
victims of this process, on the other hand, expected dramatic results
from international collaboration, without necessarily appreciating the
complexities of the art trade and trading laws in the West.
Nonetheless, it was possible to draft an acceptable text and there are
currently 91 States party to the Convention.
The provisions of the Convention are not
as well known as they should be. Principally, the Convention works at
the level of government administrations: governments are required to
take action at the request of a State party to the Convention to seize
cultural property that has been stolen. There are also obligations on
national States to administer their own cultural heritage adequately to
prevent illicit traffic. There are, however, issues concerning the
Convention which initially made some Western States reluctant to become
party to it. Some States found its terminology somewhat ambiguous and
its provisions concerning illegal exports not altogether clear. It did
not deal adequately with aspects of private law that are now recognised
as being of considerable importance since differences between national
legal systems regarding the transfer of movables have been exploited to
avoid controls. Other provisions, such as those relating to
acquisitions by institutions in an importing country (Art. 7 (a)), and
those requiring registration and the keeping of records by dealers
(Art. 10(a)), were seen as difficult by States with federal legal
systems and by those which did not yet have legislation on these
matters. For these and other reasons most Western States did not become
party to the Convention.
The Convention does not lend itself to direct application in a domestic
system of law. States Parties can make reservations and adapt its
provisions to optimise compatibility with their administrative
requirements. The objection made by some that checking imports would
create a huge bureaucracy has not been borne out by experience (Canada,
USA).
Its Implementation
The United States became a party in
1983, after intense debate. its convention on cultural property
implementation act provided a unique implementation process. stolen
cultural property can in any case be claimed directly in U.S. courts. a
special system of import controls was set up for states facing major
threat to their cultural heritage. import bans or bilateral treaties
have been established under these provisions for Bolivia, Cambodia,
Canada, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mali and Peru. in keeping with these
provisions, objects have been seized and returned to their countries of
origin. some seizures have been challenged in court and some of the
importers have succeeded, generally on grounds of insufficient proof.
The UNESCO Convention has had a considerable impact on the
international market. A major input was the ICOM Code of Ethics, the
current version of which, developed in 1978, provides that museums
should not acquire, evaluate, authenticate or exhibit cultural objects
which do not have a satisfactory provenance. The Code of Practice
adopted by the major British dealers and auction houses in 1984 also
adopted the principles of the Convention. UNESCO has now prepared a
voluntary International Code of Ethics for Dealers that also embodies
the principles of the Convention.
The United States became a party in 1983, after intense debate. its
convention on cultural property implementation act provided a unique
implementation process. stolen cultural property can in any case be
claimed directly in U.S. courts. a special system of import controls
was set up for states facing major threat to their cultural heritage.
import bans or bilateral treaties have been established under these
provisions for Bolivia, Cambodia, Canada, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mali
and Peru. in keeping with these provisions, objects have been seized
and returned to their countries of origin. some seizures have been
challenged in court and some of the importers have succeeded, generally
on grounds of insufficient proof. However, illicit trade continues to
increase. In 1983, UNESCO held a meeting of experts to examine the
Convention and see whether its performance could be improved. A number
of recommendations were made. The experts did not propose revising the
Convention, which would have been a very difficult process, especially
as there were already over 60 States Parties. They did, however,
propose that UNESCO ask an institution specialising in private law to
examine the provisions of, and differences between, national private
law provisions and develop rules to complement the public law
provisions of the 1970 Convention. UNESCO immediately proceeded to
commission UNIDROIT (the International Institute for the Unification of
Private Law, Rome) to deal with the matter. This led to the UNIDROIT
Convention on Stolen or Illegally Exported Cultural Objects 1995, which
was developed in close co-operation with UNESCO. UNESCO fully supports
the Convention and works closely with the UNIDROIT Secretariat to
publicise it with the hope that as many States as possible will become
party to both Conventions. The 1995 Convention also appears on this
Website.
Conventions and Charters
The Hague
Convention, 1954
Recommendation
on Historic Areas 1976
Adopted by the
General Conference in Nairobi in November 1976, the ‘Recommendation
concerning the Safeguarding and Contemporary Role of Historic Areas’
was in response to growing concern at dangers caused by uniformity and
depersonalized housing in modern town planning and the impact on old
town centres or districts and on traditional villages. The definition
of historic areas as a coherent whole with human activities, buildings
and surroundings was the subject of particular attention.
Recommendations were made on the establishment of national, regional
and local policies to introduce particular safeguard through technical,
economic and social measures. The roles of research, education at all
levels and of information management were emphasized in the process
with reference to strengthened collaboration with ICCROM, ICOMOS and
ICOM.
Adopted by UNESCO in 1954 as its first International Convention, it had
first been conceived at the end of the nineteenth century. The
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of
Armed Conflict went through several editions before being re-edited.
Its significance lay in providing an international definition for
cultural property, articulated in three categories: (i) movable or
immovable property of great importance to the cultural heritage of
every people, such as monuments of architecture, art or history,
whether religious or secular; (ii) buildings whose main and effective
purpose is to preserve or exhibit movable cultural property; and (iii)
centres containing a large amount of cultural property. The Convention
provides instructions for the marking and safeguarding of such property
in the case of armed conflict, and it also proposes the possibility of
establishing an international list of such properties.
UNESCO UK's
response to the consultation on
the ratification of the
Hague Convention (PDF)
ASSOCIATED MEASURES
SUPPORTED THROUGH UNESCO
Recommendation on Archaeological Excavations
1956
‘Venice Charter’ 1964
Adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO in
New Delhi in December 1956. The first recommendation concerns
International Principles Applicable to Archaeological Excavations and
recalls the general interest of international cooperation concerning
the study and preservation of all archaeological remains. It also
proposes that the criterion based on preserving all objects originating
before a certain date should be abandoned, and should in any case use
criteria allowing the necessary flexibility in protection taking into
account public interest and the scope of research. Further,
recommendations are stated on the general principles concerning the
legal and administrative system of protection, control of excavations,
preservation and assignment and rights of finds, trade of antiquities,
clandestine excavations and excavations in occupied territories.
The Second
International Congress of Architects and Technicians of Historic
Monuments approved an International Charter for the Conservation and
Restoration of Monuments and Sites that has since been known as the
‘Venice Charter’ - a fundamental reference for conservation policy.
UNESCO signed
this document together with representatives of sixteen countries. The
aim is the common responsibility to safeguard cultural heritage for
future generations in ‘the full richness of their authenticity’, but
the Charter also emphasizes that each country is responsible for
applying the plan within the framework of its own culture and
traditions. The Charter’s 16 paragraphs define some of the fundamental
principles of conservation (by reference to the conclusions of the
Athens Charter 1931), but also, in practice, the Italian Norms by
Giovannoni of 1932, and the current development of restoration policies
and theory. The meeting recommended the foundation of ICOMOS achieved
the following year.
Recommendation
on Landscapes and Sites 1962
Adopted by the
General Conference in Paris in December 1962, the recommendation
concerning the Safeguarding of the Beauty and Character of Landscapes
and Sites emphasizes the scientific and aesthetic importance of
cultural and natural landscapes and sites and the fact that they form a
heritage which is a major factor in the living conditions of the
general public. Included recommendations for protective measures in
urban and rural planning schemes; scheduling of isolated sites; and,
protection of extensive landscapes by zoning. Special attention is
given to education which addresses schools and the general public.
‘Nara Document on Authenticity’ 1994
Organized by
the Japanese government in collaboration with Norway, Canada UNESCO
ICOMOS and ICCROM the meeting recognized the need to establish clear
guidelines for the assessment of the significance and the authenticity
of World Heritage Sites. This had emerged from a broadening of the base
for the conservation of cultural heritage worldwide with the meeting of
experts taking into account the content of the Venice Charter.
The ‘Nara
Document on Authenticity’ recognizes that conservation of cultural
heritage in all its forms and historical periods is rooted in the
values attributed to the heritage. Our ability to understand these
values depends, in part, on their credibility and truthfulness.
Knowledge and understanding of the sources of information on original
and subsequent characteristics of the cultural heritage, and their
related meaning is a pre-requisite for assessing all aspects of
authenticity.
Recommendation on Public
Works 1968
Adopted by the General Conference in November
1968, the recommendation concerning the Preservation of Cultural
Property Endangered by Public or Private Works resulted from a concern
aroused over the danger for ancient temples caused by the construction
of the High Dam in the valley of the Nile. The recommendation
recognizes that it is essential to harmonise the preservation of
cultural properties with the changes necessitated by social and
economic development. Consequently it is necessary to identify
important heritage sites before planning and implementing protective
measures are feasible. The general principle is to safeguard in-situ,
however, when the economical and social conditions override this (and
cultural property must be destroyed, abandoned or transferred
elsewhere), a careful study should be made with detailed records to aid
future research.
World
Heritage Convention 1972
Adopted at its
General Conference in Paris in 1972 as a result of the growing
ecological concern for the environment, this international Convention
concerned the protection of the world cultural and natural heritage.
This has become the most widespread UNESCO Convention ratified by over
150 States. It is concerned primarily with immovable property
classified by: monuments, groups of buildings (ensembles), and sites.
The Convention established the World Heritage List of cultural and
natural heritage sites of ‘outstanding universal value’. A threatened
World Heritage Site can be included on the List of World Heritage in
Danger. Policy is guided by the Venice Charter (se below) and has
promoted a debate on the application of conservation principles in
different cultures. The Convention has become perhaps the most powerful
international tool for the promotion of conservation of both cultural
and natural heritage.
Recommendation
on Cultural and Natural Heritage 1972
Adopted by the same General Conference as
the World Heritage Convention, the recommendation concerning the
protection of the cultural and natural heritage at national level. It
is conceived as complementary to the Convention to induce States to
safeguard all components of their cultural and natural heritage as it
should ‘no longer be regarded as a check on national development but as
a determining factor in such development’, Furthermore, such heritage
should be considered as one of the essential aspects of regional
development plans and planning in general. Attenti6n is drawn to the
organization of services and cooperation among the various bodies;
definition of appropriate protective measures, whether scientific,
technical, administrative, legal or financial; educational and cultural
action; and international cooperation.
THE 1995 UNIDROIT CONVENTION ON
STOLEN OR ILLEGALLY EXPORTED CULTURAL OBJECTS OTHER INTERNATIONAL LEGAL
INSTRUMENTS ON ILLICIT TRADE
• Adopted
by Diplomatic Conference in Rome on 24 June 1995
• Currently, 12 States Parties, 14 other
States have signed but not yet ratified
• Drafted at UNESCO’s request to develop
a uniform minimum body of private law rules for the international art
trade to complement the public law provisions of the 1970 UNESCO
Convention
• Restitution
of stolen cultural objects (Articles 3 and 4) and return of illegally
exported cultural objects (Articles 5 to 7):
• “The
possessor of a cultural object which has been stolen shall return it”.
• Possibility of compensation paid
to the possessor of the stolen object where care was taken to avoid
acquiring sto–len cultural property; criteria for the establishment of
diligence include circumstances of acquisition, character of parties
involved, price paid, consultation of a register of stolen cultural
objects. No compensation necessary where the State does not already
provide it (Article 9(1))
• An illegally exported cultural object is to be returned if the object
is of significant cultural importance for the requesting State
• Possibility of compensation paid
to the possessor of the illegally exported object where care was taken
to avoid acquiring illegally exported cultural property; criteria for
establishing diligence include circumstances of acquisi–tion and
absence of an export certificate required by the law of the requesting
State
• Clandestinely
excavated objects (Articles 3 and 5):
• Illicitly excavated objects are
considered to be stolen
• Procedure for claims:
• brought by the private owner or a State before a court in the country
where the object is located
• time limits: generally 50 years or within 3 years of knowledge of the
location of the object and identity of its possessor
In In addition, other international
legal instruments apply to illicit traffic in cultural property:
• Protocol to the 1954
Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event
of Armed Conflict: provides for the return of cultural
property illegally exported from occupied territories
• European Union Directive 93/7:
applicable among the 15 Member States of the EU, it provides for a
specific pro–cedure for the return of illegally removed cultural
property
• Commonwealth
Scheme: establishes a procedure for the return of stolen or
illicitly exported objects within the Commonwealth; model legislation
has been drafted which the 54 Commonwealth Member States may use as a
basis for national legislation
PROPOSED
UNESCO CONVENTION ON INTANGIBLE HERITAGE
IMPLICATIONS
FOR IHBC AND PRESERVATION OF CRAFT SKILLS
The UNESCO UK
Culture Committee has recently been asked to consider the initial
implications for an international Convention on Intangible Cultural
Heritage. One of the interesting aspects for IHBC is the implication
for the practical transfer of traditional craft skills from one
generation to another. This has particular relevance in relation to the
crisis for heritage skills identified by the DCMS in Force for the
Future and Sustaining our Living Heritage – Skills and training in the
heritage sector by the Heritage Lottery Fund.
Background
Despite the success of the World
Heritage Convention, but where it is recognised that Africa is not well
represented on the World Heritage List, it is not considered
appropriate to widen this existing Convention definition to cover
Intangible Heritage. This is partly because the 150 signatory counties
would make this difficult and partly because there would have to be
along transition between old and new Conventions and the views of the
700 existing UNESCO Experts on World Heritage might be difficult to
assimilate.
It is of concern to ICOMOS and a number of European countries that
there are considerable tangible heritage assets to maintain without
also having to contend with intangible ones. Furthermore there are
problems of defining what intangible heritage is “outstanding”; what
the right means of preservation are and how preservation should be
structured – especially when policy is usually formulated in a
“top-down” manner by national governments not by the practitioners
directly affected. “Bottom-up” structures are therefore required not
the reverse.
One possible solution would be for UNESCO to make a Recommendation - to
act as a national standard. This could cascade down to local
authorities and others but would have a lesser status than a
Convention. Nevertheless despite the inherent difficulties, UNESCO
intends to define intangible heritage by Convention to be implemented
by the Autumn of 2003. The initial conclusion of the UK Culture
Committee is that the practical consequences must be deliverable or a
Convention is not be worth having.
There will be no priority domains and it will
be for each community to define what should be protected. UNESCO
considers it impractical to attempt a census of each threatened
heritage skill (but this is an aspect IHBC might be equipped to help
define for the UK?).
The terminology will also need further
development. Presently the UNESCO definition of intangible cultural
heritage developed by an expert meeting held in Turin is defined as:
In some
countries practical transfer of traditional craft skills has been
achieved by conferring on individuals the status of living national
treasure’ – an initiative first developed in Japan in the 1950s. The
individual retains this status for life enabling escape from the
pressures of needing to seek commercial support but gaining economic
security and independence, a secure place in the social structure while
also being able to train apprentices. Such an arrangement might be
explored in the UK?
An abridged version of the UNESCO Web pages on
the “living national treasures” system is set out below:
“For many population
groups, theintangible cultural heritageis the essential source of an
identity deeply rooted in the past. Unfortunately, however, a number of
its manifestations, such as know-how for craft production and oral
traditions have already disappeared or are in danger of doing so. The
main reason is thatlocal intangible cultural heritageis rapidly being
replaced by a standardised international culture, fostered not only by
socio- economic 'modernisation' but also by the tremendous progress of
information and transport techniques. Theintangible nature of this
heritagealso makes it vulnerable. There, is an urgent need to stop
further losses. One of the most effective ways of safeguarding the
intangible heritage is to conserve it by collecting, recording, and
archiving. Even more effective would be to ensure that the bearers of
the heritage continue to acquire further knowledge and skills and
transmit them to the next generations. With that aim in mind,
theholders of the heritage must be identified and given official
recognition.
Examples of existing systems
In 1950 the
Government of Japan gave special recognition to bearers of the skills
and techniques essential for the continuation of certain important
intangible cultural properties. Individuals so recognized were
designated as "Living National Treasures". But there could also be
collective and group recognition where it was these that were important
and not the individual as such. At 1 July 1994, seven categories of
performing arts (36 specific skills) and nine in the applied arts (39
specific skills) had been selected as important intangible cultural
properties. The skills were held by 52 individuals and 23 groups.
In 1964 the
Government of the Republic of Korea introduced its own system to ensure
the preservation and transmission to future generations of intangible
cultural properties. At September 1995, this State had a total of 92
important intangible cultural properties; 167 individual holders and 50
holding organizations.
The Philippines specifically acknowledged a
category of "National Artists" under a Presidential Decree of 1973,
which granted them certain, privileges and honours. Another programme
creating Living National Treasures(Gawad Manlilikha ng Bayan - GAMABA)
was begun in 1988 with the object of preserving indigenous traditions
and transmitting them to younger generations. Three persons from
different indigenous cultural communities were given this title in
1994.
More recently a regional scheme to create Living Human Treasures has
been established in Romania. Such "treasures" are regarded as those
exceptional folk artists that preserve local traditions in their trade.
In
France, in 1994, the Minister of Culture elevated some 20 persons to
the rank of "Maîtres d'art" (Master of Crafts). This is a new
distinction intended for those artisans known to be outstanding for
their skill and knowledge. They are required to pass that skill and
knowledge on to future generations.
Although these
States have all been working with a concept of Living Human Treasures,
the idea itself falls within the scope of the UNESCO Recommendation on
the Safeguarding of Traditional Cultures and Folklore 1989 in which
Member States are urged to preserve folklore in their respective
countries. Folklore is seen as essential to the enrichment of the
cultural heritage of humanity and the protection of cultural identities.
Definition
Living Human
Treasures are persons who embody, who have in the very highest degree,
the skills and techniques necessary for the production of selected
aspects of the cultural life of a people and the continued existence of
their material cultural heritage.
The performance and the act of creation are
intangible; embodied in the skills or techniques of those who do them.
So too are the traditional intangible elements employed by those who
protect and preserve the material cultural heritage: for example, the
techniques for working stone for replacement on monuments, preparing
wall coverings in traditional methods for historic rooms.
Consequently, the
preservation of such intangible cultural properties implies the
preservation and transmission of the skills and techniques necessary
for their creation. Giving special recognition to persons who have
those skills and techniques in the very highest degree can only do this.
Objective of
the system
The primary purpose of establishing a system of Living Human Treasures
is to preserve the skills and techniques necessary for creation of the
cultural manifestations that the State considers have a high historical
or artistic value.
The system should also reward those persons
who embody these skills and techniques so that they will be encouraged
to:
- Continue with their own work
- Where desirable, develop and expand the
frontiers of that work
- At
the same time, in all situations, train younger people to take their
place in due course.
The system should encourage
younger people to devote their lives to learning these skills and
techniques by holding out to them the possibility of fame, perhaps
riches also, if they can achieve the necessary level of excellence.
Elements of
a living human treasures system
Legal provisions
States that decide
to introduce a system of Living Human Treasures will have to establish
a means of administering it appropriate to the circumstances. There is
no one recommended method. For example, it is not absolutely necessary
to create a system of Living Human Treasures within a legal structure.
It could be done administratively, operating within the general powers
of a particular government department or through a non-governmental
organization temporarily created with governmental financial
assistance.
However, there are good reasons for having legal provisions dealing
with this subject:
- A formal structure can be created with
witch the system operates. In this way people will know what the system
means, how it functions and what can be expected of it
- Legal provisions can be used as an
educational tool in instructing the public about the intangible
cultural heritage and Living Human Treasures. The mere fact that these
exist in the law enables publicists to draw on the system as a
framework for their education and publicity efforts
- There will inevitably be jealousy and
dispute over the elevation of particular persons to the rank of Living
Human Treasures. The find that the system exists as a legal structure
should restrict criticism to the actual choice made and not the method
by which it was reached. The law cannot prevent a bad decision but it
should ensure that all the correct steps are taken so that the system
itself cannot be faulted.
Most States already
have in existence legal and administrative structures for the
protection and preservation of the tangible cultural heritage -
buildings, monuments and sites of historic, artistic and scientific
importance. In considering a legal structure to do the same for the
intangible cultural heritage, what already exists will influence these
decisions. But this should not determine the matter. Certainly there
are elements of overlap but the intangible cultural heritage has its
own unique problems, which need their own solutions.
The following
paragraphs will discuss in detail the elements of al egal structure for
a Living Human Treasures system. It is enough here to indicate the
following as a checklist of what should be considered :
-
Identification of those aspects of the intangible cultural heritage to
be preserved
-
Establishment of criteria for selection of nominees
- Maximum number of persons to be selected
each year
- Nature of
reward to be offered
-
Duties of persons selected
-
Cancellation of appointment
It must be realised
that the following paragraphs are all subject to overriding aspects of
the national legal system, such as constitutional and administrative
provisions.
Identification and
designation
Once the decision is made to introduce a system of Living Human
Treasures, it is necessary to establish which aspects of national life
are to be preserved. As the examples at the beginning of these
Guidelines illustrate, there will be probably be considerable
differences here between States.
It is not necessary that the system cover the
entire State or the whole of national life. In many cases this will be
what happens - but it is not essential:
- The
system could he restricted to a particular region of the State for
reasons peculiar to that State. For example, it may appear that one
province is particularly rich in those aspects of the intangible
cultural heritage that it is wished to protect and preserve (Example of
Romania)
- The scheme may
be so restricted on a trial basis to test its operation
- Application of the scheme may be confined
to a certain portion of the population. This could be particularly
useful where there is an indigenous people within the area of the
State. What may be important aspects of cultural life for them might be
ignored by the rest of the population of the State
- If the State desired, the scheme could be
adjusted to apply to different aspects of the relevant cultures
In
essence implementation of the scheme depends on what the State
concerned wants to achieve and should not be overly influenced by what
has been done elsewhere.
But whatever the objective, there needs to be
an organization established to make the decisions. The nature of this
body will obviously depend on what decisions the State has made
concerning the issues discussed above. The following discussion deals
with a national system covering all peoples within the territorial
confines of the State. It could be adapted for other circumstances.
It is
recommended that a Commission of Experts be established to make
recommendations to the Minister of Government responsible for cultural
matters. In most cases the Minister would have the final decision but
this is a matter for the State concerned within its normal
administrative operations. The Commission should be supported by a
permanent secretariat.
The Commission's first task would be to
investigate which aspects of the intangible cultural heritage the State
should preserve as a priority and so recommend to the Minister. It must
be made clear that failure to choose a particular aspect does not mean
it is regarded as unimportant. Everything cannot be done at once, and
the Commission will have to choose which aspects are very important and
are likely to disappear if they are not encouraged.
Once the decision on
what is to be protected has been made, the Commission should have the
task of nominating to the Minister a list of persons who embody the
necessary skills and techniques. Although there will be individual
nominations, in certain sectors of the intangible cultural heritage it
will be necessary to nominate groups of persons as collectively
embodying the relevant skills and techniques. Thus, there may be
collective recognition when there is a group of two or more persons who
collectively embody the artistry of a performing art or the special
skills which two or more craft persons share in common. Here may also
be group recognition where the members are primarily bearers of
techniques and skills in the performing or applied arts where it is the
contribution of the group that is important rather than the role of the
individual or where many persons possess such techniques or skills.
In making
nominations, members of the Commission could rely on their own
knowledge but it would be preferable to institute a system whereby
eligible persons could be brought to their attention by others
employing the same skills and techniques, by members of the public etc.
Such a process should be formalised, with the Commission calling for
recommendation at a set time each year.
The Commission would
also have the duty to recommend cancellation of a particular
appointment as a "Living Human Treasure" where, in certain cases, the
required functions are not being performed.
The Commission
should have the responsibility to record the techniques and skills
employed by Living Human Treasures using all available methods. While a
recording does not have the same flavour as actually seeing those
techniques and skills in operation, it is an essential process for
their study and later comparison with those used by other persons. Such
records should be duplicated and made available to the public and
researchers both national and foreign.
To reiterate, the
following approach to identification and designation is recommended:
-
decide the scope of the proposed scheme within the State i.e. whether
it should apply nationally or be restricted to a region or group of
people
- establish a
Commission of Experts to:
-
Recommend which areas of intangible cultural property should be
protected
- Nominate
holders of skills and techniques within these areas for appointment as
Living Human Treasures
-
Cancel such appointments where necessary
- Record the skills and techniques used
Criteria of selection
a)
The heritage
In choosing an aspect of the intangible
cultural heritage to receive protection by way of the "living human
treasured" system, States should have regard to the following criteria:
-
Its outstanding and exceptional human creative value
- Its unique or at least exceptional
testimony to a cultural tradition and history
- Its characteristics distinctive of a given
region or school
The danger of its disappearing because of:
-
A serious decline in the number of practitioners and/or those
succeeding them
- A
significant loss of historical authenticity
- An important loss of cultural significance
- An important modification in the
juridical status of the intangible cultural property bringing about a
diminution of its protection
b) The Living Human Treasures
In nominating a
person or group to the rank of "living human treasure", the Commission
should consider the following criteria:
- The
degree of skill possessed
-
The dedication of the person or groups
- The ability to advance the skill or
technique
- The ability to
pass on the skill or technique to trainees
Number
of nominees a year
No attempt is made here to
suggest a maximum number of nominees for each year. That depends on
many factors individual to the particular State. For example, if Living
Human Treasures are going to be rewarded with money, that will
influence how many can be nominated. Moreover, the more persons
appointed to the rank, the less would be its recognition as a truly
outstanding achievement. These are all factors which administrators, in
setting up the system, must consider. However, it is recommended that
the legislation state the maximum number of nominations that may be
made by the Commission each year. The Commission should, of course, be
entitled to nominate a smaller number if it so desires.
Rewards granted to appointees
The primary
reward should be extensive public recognition of a person's appointment
to this rank similar to what is done when someone receives a
significant public decoration
- The award should be made at a formal
ceremony where a distinctive emblem could be handed to the people
concerned by the highest possible public official in the country
- A programme of activities
concentrating on elements of the intangible cultural heritage should be
held simultaneously to celebrate the new appointments.
The Commission
should engage in continuing publicity to keep all appointees before the
public eye. Once the public recognises the special position of a person
to is a "living human treasure", it is highly probable that that
person's services will be in great demand. In this way he/she will be
able to continue using the skill or technique in question.
The possibility of
financial rewards should be considered. These could take the form of a
direct yearly grant free of taxation. It could also involve the
provision of equipment and supplies free of tax such as value added
tax. Also to be considered is an exemption from taxation of the "living
human treasure's" income earned from exercise of the skills and
techniques so honoured.
Other rewards could also be considered
depending on the social structure of the State. For example, where
there is no public health service, the grant of medical and
hospitalisation benefits would be a considerable prize. Similarly, a
lifetime insurance policy may be granted with the State paying the
premium.
Duties of appointees
The duties of
Living Human Treasures should be:
- To improve their skills and
techniques
- To transmit
those skills and techniques to trainees
- The costs of this to be paid by the State
- To permit the recording of them in
tangible form (video, tape, and publication) without any question or
issue of copyright
- To
present the products of their skills and techniques on a regular basis
to the public
- The
programme to be organised by the State in co-operation with the living
cultural property
- The
costs to be paid from admission fees and other proceeds of the
programme with any shortfall to be made up by the State.
Cancellation
of appointment
At some time a person appointed
to the rank of "living human treasure" would become unable, through age
or mental infinity, to perform the duties set out above. It would be
unfair, however, to then cancel the appointment. As part of the reward
is the honour involved, it would be better to allow the person to keep
the rank but remove some of the rewards; for example, any grant made on
a yearly basis could be reduced.
On the other hand,
if the person is fit and able to undertake the duties stipulated, but
refuses to do so after having been warned, it is fit and proper that
the award should be cancelled.
Eventual
UNESCO assistance
UNESCO assistance will either be
financed by the participation programme or extra- budgetary funding.
All requests should be submitted to :
Ms Noriko Aikawa,
Chief - Intangible Cultural Heritage Section,
Division of
Cultural Heritage, UNESCO. I rue Miollis 75732 Paris Cedex 15
Tel: (33 1) 45 68 45 19
Fax: (33 1 ) 45 68.55 96,
Email:
n.aikawa@unesco.org
Preparatory
assistance
Assistance will be given to Member States
willing to establish the above-mentioned system for the purpose of:
-
Preparing a tentative list of the intangible cultural heritage to be
protected and preserved by way of the Living Human Treasures system;
- Preparing recommendations on the
above;
- Preparing
nominations for the list of Living Human Treasures
- Preparing requests for traditional
co-operation, including requests relating to the organizationof
training courses or seminars.
This
type of assistance, known as "preparatory assistance" can take the form
of consultant services.
Training
Member States may request support for the training of specialised staff
at all levels for the formation of a national register of intangible
cultural heritage which it is desired to protect and preserve as well
as the list of Living Human Treasures.
Priority in training
activities will be given to group training at the local or regional
levels. The training of individual persons will be essentially limited
to short term refresher programmes and exchanges of experience.
Requests for
the training of specialised staff at the national or regional level
should contain the following information:
-
Details on the training courses concerned (courses offered, level of
instruction, teaching staff, number of students and country of origin,
date, place and duration, etc.) and, when applicable, the functional
responsibility of each participant with respect to the preservation of
the intangible cultural heritage programme;
- Type of assistance requested (financial
contribution to costs of training, provision of specialised teaching
staff, provision of equipment, books and educational materials for
training course);
-
Approximate cost of support requested, including as appropriate tuition
fees, daily subsistence allowance, allocations for purchase of
educational material, travel costs to and from training centres, etc.
- Other contributions: national
financing received or anticipated multilateral or bilateral
contributions.
Requests for support for individual
training courses should be submitted on the standard "Application for
Fellowship" form used for all fellowships administered by UNESCO which
can be obtained from UNESCO National Commissions, UNESCO offices and
the offices of the United Nations Development Programme in Member
States, as well as from the Secretariat.
Istanbul
Declaration - Updated: 24/09/2002
UNESCO's
preparations for a convention on intangible cultural heritage are
continuing, but more slowly than hitherto expected. A full text will
not be submitted until the 2005 UNESCO General Conference. The
inter-governmental meeting convened by UNESCO in September concluded
that more time was required for discussion of the some of the key
conceptual issues and of the precise format for a new standard-setting
instrument. There was agreement that the relationship between the
convention as originally proposed and the 1972 World Heritage
Convention would need to explored more thoroughly.
A further
inter-governmental meeting is being convened in February 2003 to allow
for preparation by the UNESCO Secretariat of a further draft
convention, based on suggestions received from Member States. The UK
government's line is that the debate should first concentrate on the
bigger issues, and that it would be inappropriate to comment on
specific wording for the time being.
The Round-table of
Ministers of Culture, September 2002 produced a Declaration
highlighting key principles for a future convention, including:-
-
the need to ensure participation by all stakeholders - including local
communities;
- the need
to ensure intangible cultural heritage practices benefit;
- from recognition within States, providing
they respect universal human rights;
- the need to explore new forms of
international co-operation;
-
(focusing on the exchange of good practice, rather than ascribing value
to specific expressions of cultural heritage).
The
full text is at
http://portal.unesco.org/ev.php?URL_ID=6209&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201
Bob Kindred MBE - IHBC Representative UNESCO UK Culture
Committee April 2002
The World Heritage Committee -
Budapest
The World Heritage Committee
held its 26th session in Budapest, Hungary from
24-29 June, 2002. The session was attended by over 300 participants
representing all 21 Committee members (Argentina Belgium China Colombia
Egypt Finland Greece Hungary India Lebanon, Mexico, Nigeria, Oman,
Portugal, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, Saint Lucia, South
Africa, Thailand the United Kingdom and Zimbabwe) over 50 observers
from States Parties to the World Heritage Convention, representatives
from the Advisory Bodies to the World Heritage Committee (ICOMOS IUCN
and ICCROM) and nearly 20 other organizations.
On 28 June 2002, the
World Heritage Committee adopted the Budapest
Declaration on World Heritage, marking the 30th anniversary
of the signing of the World Heritage Convention in 1972. The
Declaration recognizes the near universality of the World Heritage
Convention, and calls for the application of the Convention to ?heritage in all its diversity.?
The Committee renewed its commitment to
geo-cultural diversity and a balance between conservation,
sustainability and development, underlining the importance of
co-operation in the protection of the world's heritage, particularly in
zones of conflict.
In light of this, the Committee requested
UNESCO and the Advisory Bodies to continue assisting the government of
Afghanistan in elaborating a medium and long-term action plan for the
implementation of the World Heritage Convention. ?In
order to help with the rehabilitation of Afghanistan's cultural and
natural heritage, the Committee provided US$150,000 for 2002-2003 for
training, documentation, conservation and management.
The Committee also
unanimously adopted a decision deploring the destruction and damage
caused to the cultural heritage of Palestine. It allocated US$1 50,000
for 2003 from the Emergency Reserve of the World Heritage Fund in order
to assist with the task of establishing an inventory of the cultural
and natural heritage in the Palestinian territories, the assessment of
its state of conservation, and the identification of measures for its
preservation and rehabilitation, as well as the training and capacity
building of Palestinian specialists.
The Committee also welcomed the establishment
of the World Heritage Partnerships Initiative as a means, on an
experimental basis, of achieving a new systematic approach to
partnerships in support of World Heritage conservation, and called for
further development of a regulatory frame work for the initiative.
It asked the
Director-General to develop performance indicators for the strategic
objectives adopted (the 4 Cs): strengthening the Credibility of the
World Heritage List; ensuring the effective Conservation of World
Heritage properties; promoting the development of effective Capacity
building in States Parties and increasing public awareness involvement
and support for World Heritage through Communication
Commenting on the
work of the Committee, UNESCO Director-General Koichiro Matsuura stated
that the destruction of the ancient Buddha statues at Bamyan last year
by the Taliban in Afghanistan would ?weigh
on our conscience as the world's
moral authority and guardian of heritage. This is all the more reason
why the decision of the Committee at this session to extend its concern
to protect the heritage in the Palestinian territories is so important.?
Discussion at the 26th session was intense.
Because of a very full agenda some items of importance, and notably the
legal issues concerning the In Danger Listing and the finalization of
the revised Operational Guidelines, had to be postponed for discussion
at an extraordinary session of the World Heritage Committee to be held
at UNESCO Headquarters from 17 to 22 March 2003.
DOCOMOMO AND WORLD HERITAGE
The
World Heritage Centre and ICOMOS jointly organized a session on
'Identification and Preservation of Modern Urban Heritage' during the
7th International Conference of DOCOMOMO (the International
Working-party for Documentation and Conservation of Buildings, Sites
and Neighbourhoods of the Modern Movement), at UNESCO Headquarters from
16-19 September 2002.
Some 400 international professionals and academics,
historians, architects, planners and policy-makers attended the
Conference, for three days of discussions on this year's theme: Image,
Use and Heritage: the Reception of Architecture of the Modern Movement.
The panel on 'Identification and Preservation of Modern Urban
Heritage,' organized by the WHC and ICOMOS, dealt with some of the
important issues related to modern heritage, such as the test of
authenticity (in design, craftsmanship and materials), the role and
value of shared heritage, and the significance of urban ensembles, also
in combination with historic centres.
This session examined the importance of the identification
and preservation of urban ensembles which are related to the modern
era, and how they can be integrated with historic cities or city
centres. A significant issue was the determination of the criteria for
assessment of modern heritage properties proposed as World Heritage.
The panel also addressed the question of how to find advocates for
modern heritage.
It was suggested that appropriate methodologies for the
assessment and selection of this type of heritage need to be developed,
providing for balanced thematic and geographical representation.
Strategies must also be devised to advise States Parties and the
general public on the importance of the protection and conservation of
modern heritage.
'The main question,' said Ron van Oers, WHC Consultant for
urban conservation and management, and one of the organizers of the
Conference, 'is how to reach an understanding and agreement on the
specific character of properties of modern heritage, in particular the
urban ensembles from the modern era, in the sense that they represent
major changes in economic, social, cultural, artistic and/or aesthetic
concepts and values.'
The DOCOMOMO Conference also focused on buildings, urban
schemes and their interpretations, the audience and users and the local
and international dimensions of modern architecture. Participants also
discussed the writings and images of the modern movement and the
reception of technical innovations.
BUDAPEST DECLARATION ON
WORLD HERITAGE
We, the members of the World Heritage
Committee, recognize the universality of the 1972 Convention concerning
the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage and the
consequent need to ensure that it applies to heritage in all its
diversity, as an instrument for the sustainable development of all
societies through dialogue and mutual understanding
The properties on the World Heritage List
are assets held in trust to pass on to generations of the future as
their rightful inheritance
In
view of the increasing challenges to our shared heritage, we will:
encourage
countries that have not yet joined the Convention to do so at the
earliest opportunity as well as join other related international
heritage protection instruments;
invite States Parties to the Convention to identify and
nominate cultural and natural heritage properties representing heritage
in all its diversity for inclusion on the World Heritage List
seek to ensure
an appropriate and equitable balance between conserva tion
sustainability and development so that World Heritage properties can be
protected through appropriate activities contributing to the social and
economic development and the quality of life of our communities
join to co
operate in the protection of heritage recognizing that to
harm such heritage is to harm at the same time the human spirit and the
world s inheritance
promote World Heritage through communication education
research training and public awareness strategies
seek to ensure the
active involvement of our local communities at all levels in the
identification protection and management of our World Heritage
properties
We, the World
Heritage Committee, will co-operate and seek the assistance of all
partners for the support of World Heritage For this purpose we invite
all interested parties to co operate and to promote the following
objectives
strengthen
the Credibility of the World Heritage List, as a
representa tive and geographically balanced testimony of cultural and
natural proper ties of outstanding universal value;
ensure the effective Conservation
of World Heritage properties;
promote the development of effective Capacity
building measures including assistance for preparing the
nomination of properties to the World Heritage List for the
understanding and implementation of the World Heritage Convention and
related instruments
increase public awareness, involvement and support for World
Heritage through Communication.
We will evaluate at our 31st session in
2007 the achievements made in the pursuit of the above mentioned
objectives and in support of this commitment.
Budapest 28 June 2002
UNESCO Universal Declaration on
Cultural Diversity
The UNESCO Universal
Declaration on Cultural Diversity has significance for the historic
environment and an Action Plan has been prepared for Implementation
with 20 objectives, of which No.13. Formulating
policies and strategies for the preservation and enhancement of the
cultural and natural heritage, notably the oral and intangible cultural
heritage, and combating illicit traffic in cultural goods and services is
the most significant, although No.8 dealing with `Living National
Treasures’ also has significance for the perpetuation of craft skills .
The UNESCO preamble
states: “The notion of cultural heritage has expanded
greatly in recent years. From initially covering only the most
monumental remnants of cultures and civilizations, it has gradually
been extended to embrace new categories of heritage from non-artistic
fields: the industrial heritage, underwater heritage, and so forth. The
twenty-year old notion of “cultural landscape” reflects our awareness
that nature and culture cannot be separated in our approach to the’
heritage if we are to render a true account of the diversity of’
cultural manifestations, particularly those where a close link is
expressed between human beings and their natural environment. The more
recent notion of “intangible heritage” refers to acts of creation and
representation (oral traditions in craft skills) that serve to transmit
the ways of society, traditional skills and know-how, beliefs and
practices relating to nature (e.g. pharmacopoeia), languages and oral
traditions. The cultural heritage of humanity is complex, fragile and
endangered. Concrete measures to protect it are more of a must than
ever. Fresh perceptions of what constitutes heritage, especially the
intangible heritage, need to be sought, and partnerships need to be
initiated with the private sector, especially the tourism industry.
UNESCO was at the forefront of the Abu Simbel and Nubia campaigns
launched in the early 1960s. It launched an innovative List of
Intangible Cultural Heritage in May 2001. And it must maintain its
vanguard attitude in the years to come.
Making the intangible
tangible
The
oral and intangible cultural heritage is vulnerable because it hinges
on moments in time and their actors. The concept of “Living Human
Treasures” makes a pioneering contribution to the sustainability of the
tangible cultural heritage, since it enables those invaluable actors to
pass their know-how on to future generations. Similarly, the list of
Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage sets out to preserve
certain key scenes, events and performances. Yet the very notion of
“intangible heritage’ is still little known. And it is paradoxically so
rich in potential that it could evolve in any of a number of different
directions. While UNESCO strives to devise a standard setting
instrument along the lines of the one established for the tangible
heritage, it may be worth inviting Member States to develop their own
research, mapping and awareness-raising strategies. National intangible
heritage task forces could be established to come up with appropriate
mechanisms at the national level. They should have the appropriate
funding and mandate to allow them to assess legal feasibility, to
identify partners and to increase awareness of the intangible heritage.
New mechanisms for public debate, opinion-forming and awareness-raising
could be created in order to highlight the links between national and
international intangible heritage-related cultural policy. One
possibility might be to create a National Forum for the Intangible
Heritage in each Member State.
Reinventing
heritage schools
The
few existing “heritage schools” in the Western world are deeply rooted
in the tradition of monument conservation and restoration, and need to
be re-attuned to contemporary times. Meanwhile, many of the West’s
“landscape schools” are still geared to neat floral arrangements, i.e.
the maintenance of parks and gardens. Both of these schools should be
incorporated into a wider framework such as that offered by UNESCO’s
current definition of the cultural heritage. They should also be
brought into the mainstream of North/South exchanges, so that the
strictly Western concept of “patrimony” collapses under the weight of
the facts. New partnerships may trigger the creation of institutions
in developing countries and countries in transition. There is a
significant need throughout the world for new, well-trained
administrators capable of managing heritage projects and, moreover,
coping with the ever-growing demands of the far from steadfastly
culture-sensitive tourism industry.
Fighting on several
fronts
There
is an ever-increasing demand for rare cultural objects, especially
antiquities, as witnessed in their soaring prices. To combat looting,
UNESCO encourages Member States to fight on several fronts:
implementing the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and
Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of
Cultural Property; developing bilateral and multilateral agreements;
ratifying the 1995 UNIDROIT Convention on Stolen or Illegally Exported
Cultural Objects; establishing regional cooperation networks;
increasing collaboration with organizations such as INTERPOL; and
creating specialized private databases to track stolen cultural
property. Yet this is not enough to deter traffickers, who are tapping
into the possibilities offered by cyberspace, and cultivating the field
of illicit cultural services such as money laundering through
apparently bona fide institutions and so on. It follows that new
conventions will have to be drafted and adopted in an effort to keep up
with the ever-growing sophistication of the cultural villains.
Cultural heritage as a
universal language
The
cultural heritage has become a complex reality, reflecting a cultural
diversity whose role in the development of societies must be
recognized. Recent current events have shown how the heritage, seen as
representing the values of identity - religious, national,
community-based - can be held hostage as a supreme symbol of willfully
rejected otherness (monuments destroyed, traditions in neglect). The
heritage is a key stake in and medium for intercultural communication,
and acts of aggression against it undermine all hope of dialogue.
Heritage education would help strengthen the concept of a common
heritage of humanity that is the fruit of manifold exchanges between
cultures and civilizations. Then, through a “lexicon” of forms,”
sensations and meanings, the heritage will be able to offer the
universal language needed to build a culturally viable future.
With regard to
objective No.8 on Living National Treasures the UNECO states the
following:
When people are unique
‘living treasures”
Traditional
forms of teaching are often employed to transmit a society’s
“oral and intangible cultural heritage: artistic, scientific
and religious knowledge, for instance. This is the most fragile kind of
knowledge, as it relies on the physical and intellectual capacities of
a few individuals. Preserving it can involve either collecting and
archiving it - although it may soon be dead knowledge, with nobody left
to tell the next generation how to use it - or conserving it in its
living form and ensuring transmission to future generations. This is
where UNESCO’s “Living Human Treasures’ project should be developed
within the framework of the Action Plan of its Universal Declaration on
Cultural Diversity. When artists, craftspeople and other “living
libraries” gain official recognition, better care can be taken to
ensure the transfer of their know-how, techniques and skills to others.
When people are
resources to be shared
Such
a system could be extended to people whose knowledge may not be so
unusual or rare, but is still extremely useful to transmit to younger
generations. These “UNESCO Resource Persons” could be invited to share
their knowledge (whatever the domain) with audiences in schools,
colleges, universities, workshops, private companies, and so on. It is
often remarked that elderly people, especially in the Western world,
are cast aside as if they were so much “dead wood”. But elderly people
are often willing to continue to play an active role in society - going
to hospitals to read stories to children, or to schools in the evenings
to resume writing drills with early learners, etc. “UNESCO Resource
Persons” and other such programmes, associated with NGOs like Help Age
International, for example, could rely on these voluntary workers to
help maintain the great chain of social well-being.
When the treasures are
trained to speak out
There
may be cases where knowledge-holders simply do not know exactly what
they are doing when they perform, produce or act. It just happens. They
cannot quite explain it in words. Their knowledge is so corporeal that
switching from gestures to words is difficult if not impossible.
Transmission of that “embodied” knowledge to future generations may be
problematic. Specialists could intervene, with the support of UNESCO
and its Member States, in order to train the bearers of an all too
intangible heritage to speak it out. After video-taping the whole
process and watching it with their actors as many times as necessary,
they could work together to lay down written records, and the “human
treasures” could gradually be trained to make their knowledge verbally
explicit - cognitive unloading, so to speak. In some cases, guidelines
may be drafted for future practitioners. In a sense, this is modern
pedagogy creating a traditional pedagogy. Such experimental approaches
should be encouraged only when culturally appropriate.