Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage



KYOTO (JAPAN)

Celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage
 
REFLECTIONS ON THE 1972 CONVENTION
 
 


Dr. SOK An
Chairperson of the World Heritage Committee

 
Kyoto, November 6th 2012
Dear Madam Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO,
Your Excellency Mr Daisuke Matsumoto, Senior Vice-Minister of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology,

Your Excellency Mr Masuo Nishibayashi, Ambassador of Japan to UNESCO, and the Chairman of the Closing Event of the Celebration of the 40th Anniversary of WH Convention 

Your Excellency Mr. Koïchiro MATSUURA, Former Director-General of UNESCO

Dr Sen Genshitu, Good will Ambassador of UNESCO

Your Excellency Mr Francesco Bandarin, Assistance Director-General of UNESCO for Culture,

Your Excellency Kishore Rao, Director of the World Heritage Centre,

Your Excellency Mr Kazuyuki Hamada, Parliamentary Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs

Your Excellency Mr Yasuhiro Kajiwara, Parliamentary Secretary Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries,

Your Excellency Mr Seiichi Kondo, Commissioner for Cultural Affairs 

Honourable Excellencies,
Distinguished professors and experts,
Dear colleagues of the World Heritage Committee,
Ladies and gentlemen,
Soshite Nihon no Mina-sama Kon-nitchiwà, (Et Bonjour à tous nos amis du Japon)

Before anything else, I wish to perform a pleasant duty, rather a double duty!
First, I must address the honourable representatives of the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs to express my sincere and heartfelt thanks for inviting me to be with you today to join in these festive days of KYOTO.
My other thoughts go to all the Member States of the World Heritage Committee, which, as you well know, includes our host JAPAN.
These 21 states have, by consensus, bestowed on me the honour (much appreciated by my country, the Kingdom of Cambodia!) of holding the Chairmanship of the Committee.
This took place in the beginning of last July in Saint Petersburg, in Russian. I was absent at the time, but I was very grateful and I want now to take the opportunity of this solemn occasion of our meeting in Kyoto to publicly express this gratitude.
Colleagues of the Committee,
Thank you, with all my heart, for having provided me the particular privilege of being the Chairman of the World Heritage Committee in 2012, the year in which the international community celebrates the 40th anniversary of the 1972 Convention.
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Everything, or almost everything, will be said here in Kyoto, and most certainly will be very well said our beautiful 1972 Convention, known worldwide and warmly celebrated for its successes. I am pleased to greet those prestigious former presidents of the Committee, who are present here today. Experts from a large number and diversity of backgrounds are also participating in our meetings. Their active presence and the variety of their contributions to the debates and discussions reflect, not only CULTURAL DIVERSITY, but also the various approaches to the field of heritage (whether cultural or natural) that are needed to ensure sustainable agreement - consensus without compromising!
Therefore allow me, on this joyous day celebrating the 40th anniversary, to share some thoughts on the 1972 CONVENTION.
Ladies and gentlemen, for more than a decade as Chairman of the APSARA National Authority, I and my colleagues have been able to ensure the protection, the enhancement and the management of the Angkor heritage, a jewel on the World Heritage List since 1992. Also, as some of you may already know, between 2002 and 2008 I was responsible with technical support from Cambodian and international experts, for the preparation of the registration dossier of the Temple of PREAH VIHEAR.
Under the auspices of the Royal Government and His Excellency the Prime Minister of Cambodia, Samdech Akka Maha Sena Padei Techo HUN Sen, we undertook all the necessary legal and administrative measures to safeguard the TEMPLE, and to achieve its inclusion in the List in Quebec City, Canada, in July 2008, during the 32nd session of the Committee.
However, despite my continuous involvement in all the processes and despite my academic training as historian, geographer and sociologist, as well as in the National School of Administration (ENA), I cannot claim, in the presence of such estimable experts, to discuss either the protection or the enhancement of heritage, much less to intervene in discussions regarding the ethics and the practice of heritage.
I shall therefore confine myself to simple reflections on the Convention.
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
In this moment, I would like to propose a general idea that seems essential to me, and I hope that many observers will share my view.
What seems to me to distinguish the Convention on the Protection of the World Heritage is the quite unique fact that it is the cultural face of the globalisation.
In this regard, please allow me to make a short review.
Since the end of the often relentless antagonisms, between the Eastern and Western blocks, we have witnessed a worldwide reinforcement of the path of dialogue and the search for consensus. Despite economic imbalances and social divides, we once again try to focus on thinking about ways and means to "build peace in the minds of men." It is in this context that the role of UNESCO has been also enhanced, thanks to the efforts and the support of the Member States and by the will of the remarkable Director-Generals who have held the leadership, especially from the days of His Excellency Mr. Amadou Mahtar M'BOW until Her Excellency Mrs. Irina Bokova.
As it has been well highlighted by the analyses and the assessments presented during the celebration of the 65th anniversary of its founding, our International Organization has become truly global. But even more than this, it has really become an excellent place to express visions and propose innovations, advocating the exchange, and sharing of knowledge and know-how.
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
My recalling the universal mission of UNESCO was to better reflect the ideal of universality that inspired the drafters of the 1972 Convention.
It is well known that before the adoption of this Convention by the General Conference of UNESCO during its 17th session on November 16th 1972, interest was essentially focused on monuments and works of art. And, as a result of traumas related to World War II, the emphasis was on the need to protect these monuments and works of art in case of armed conflict (shown by the Hague Convention, adopted on May 14th 1954).
In 1972, our World Heritage Convention made significant innovations: firstly, as regards its scope broadened cultural heritage includes not only monuments, but also ensembles (that is to say, groups of buildings), and sites (the latter are the work of man or the combined works of man and nature). But in my humble opinion, the most essential innovation lies elsewhere. The Convention provides, through its philosophy and its legal form, a NEW APPROACH to heritage. It managed to overcome the old and vivid tensions between the two forces of  representation:
- First, the inextricable bonds (and so dear to peoples and nations, especially in third world countries!), the bonds between cultural properties and cultural identity,
- Second, the progressive universality of cultural properties, due to the fact that humanity, in the ethics of UNESCO, has been and now is more and more defined by a dynamic assembly of cultures.
Already, in the late 60s and early 70s, UNESCO was very definitely ahead of its time. The 1972 Convention, in its very fundamental principles, held in great account of the DIVERSITY OF CULTURES, even before a specific Convention was achieved in 2005, giving institutional legitimacy at the international level to this notion. This DIVERSITY is reflected in the implementation of the Convention and can be seen by browsing the great World Heritage List built since 1978, the year when the first inclusions were made on the occasion of the second session of the Committee, held in Washington, and subsequently and masterfully leading up to the present in 2012, at the 36th session of the Committee in St. Petersburg. Across the globe, as well as in the aforementioned List, we observe the presence of that which is essential in the eyes of the States Parties to the Convention, namely civilizations, cultures, religions, and also architectures, building engineering and fine arts. Despite of necessity being only a sample, the repertoire is really REPRESENTATIVE AND UPLIFTING.
Colleagues,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Our Convention has another remarkable feature: its implementation has allowed many countries to reclaim the entire historical journey that their territory followed and to integrate their cultural diversity in the very core of their national list of properties.
Take, for example, the case of Tunisia, which I know better than others thanks to Professor Azedine BESCHAOUCH, former chairman of our Committee and, since 1993, Scientific Secretary of the International Coordination Committee for Angkor. Nowadays, Tunisia is a country known for its Arab culture and Islamic civilization. But its list of properties reclaims Phoenician, Roman and Christian archaeological sites; that is to say from centuries ago and before Islam. The same situation is shared by the Arab-Muslim Libya. In this country, the proportion of sites from Greco-Roman antiquity is even predominant.
Let’s also consider the exemplary case of Spain. In its List appear masterpieces of Arabic architecture and Islamic art, with Cordoba, Granada, Toledo, Seville, and so on.
I now arrive at a third feature of our Convention. It has been able to permit (we do not say it often enough!) a distancing from certain conflict or sensitive issues in international relations, and also a reinforcing of the symbolic significance of particular properties.
In this regard, the inscription dossier of Senegal Goree Island seems to me exemplary. Goree Island is, for universal consciousness, the symbol of the slave trade "with its procession of suffering, tears and death." It will always be "the archetype of the suffering of the black people through the ages" and a notorious and a tragic place in the history of slavery between Africa and America.
Proposing its inscription in 1978, SENEGAL construed (I quote the words of the nomination proposal), "the fundamental reasons behind our actions regarding Goree stem from humanistic concerns. Goree was the stage for the fiercest clashes between human beings. Modern-day Senegal wishes to turn it into A SANCTUARY OF RECONCILIATION OF HUMAN-BEINGS THROUGH FORGIVENESS."
In this context, dear colleagues, I would like briefly to draw your attention to the case of the inclusion on the List of the Old City of Jerusalem and its Walls. Originally requested in 1980 by the Kingdom of Jordan, which managed the old city until its occupation by Israel in 1967, the inscription was initially inspired by the political conjuncture, the regional conflict, and difficulties in applying the 1954 Convention.
Despite being the object of differing claims of identity, a place of confrontations in the name of history and memory and, a field of a fierce competition between antagonistic representations of the past, the Old City of Jerusalem eventually came to be inscribed outside of this context because of its outstanding universal nature. The symbolic significance of its heritage has already been recognised emphasizing the need to perpetuate, on that very soil, the intertwining between the three cultures and the three heritages relevant for Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
If time would allow it, we could analyze the case of the Mostar Bridge in Bosnia-Herzegovina showing the manner in which the implementation of the 1972 Convention has inspired a remarkable approach by federal and cantonal leaders of this country. The idea appeal to UNESCO to rebuild this historic bridge gave them hope for its inscription. The "Bridge" was intentionally destroyed during the civil war by extremists in the former Yugoslavia. Its reconstruction was carried out in an identical, and if I may say so, in an authentic manner, as I was shown by Professor Mounir BOUCHENAKI, former Deputy Director-General of UNESCO for Culture. By making the Old Bridge of Mostar a property of the universal heritage, the World Heritage Committee has made prevail the ethics of healing and the symbolism of reconciliation between former antagonists.
Madam Director-General,
Honourable Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I must certainly now reach my conclusion.
Due to the fact that I am Cambodian, I have abstained myself from speaking of the sites inscribed at the request of Cambodia, namely the sites of ANGKOR and the Temple of PREAH VIHEAR TEMPLE.  I will make but a single remark, that of a Chairman evaluating the past actions of the Committee. In its wisdom, the Committee, in 1992, did not take into account all the possible arguments that could, considering the state Cambodia was in at the time, have justified a refusal to inscribe ANGKOR. It took into account only a single but essential factor: to allow the preservation of this important site for the history of humanity.
Everyone knows the beneficial consequences of this courageous decision. Once the site was registered in October 1993, Japan was able to organize an international conference on the conservation and development of the Angkor site. This founding conference gave the signal for outstanding international action, which has lasted twenty years, under the auspices of UNESCO and co-chaired by Japan and France, whose results have been truly spectacular.
Finally, some concluding thoughts.
The 1972 Convention encompasses cultural, as well as the natural heritage. Others, more knowledgeable than me, will be able to assess the great advancements achieved by the Convention, as regards the safeguarding and management of natural properties on the List. For my part, having a little knowledge about cultural properties, I have limited myself to them. The cultural properties inscribed in the World Heritage List, this wonderful cultural repertoire allows, for sure, "a mutual understanding of cultures and the mutual understanding between nations." It can also provide the solid foundation to that which UNESCO has called universal civilization or even "universal humanism", a concept preferred by the great poet Aimé Césaire. I chose to refer to him here because World Heritage also encourages dreams and poetry.
Obviously there is no cultural heritage without culture or rather cultures. And so we must say: "MANY CULTURES, A SINGLE HERITAGE: THE HERITAGE OF HUMANITY."
Culture is, in fact, the sap of nations. HE Mr. Koichiro Matsuura was kind enough to confide me that, while visiting Kabul in 2001 he had read, in the form of graffiti engraved on the walls of the National Museum, this beautiful maxim:
"A nation stays alive when its culture stays alive"
So we can proclaim: "World Heritage stays alive when cultures stay alive." Yes, thanks to the 1972 Convention, World Heritage will stay alive. We will make sure it will. This is our oath, made here today in KYOTO!

Thank you very much for your attention.