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Intangible heritage - why should we care? | Prof. Máiréad Nic Craith | TEDxHeriotWattUniversity

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    Hi, guys.
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    Today I want to talk to you about ICH,
    intangible cultural heritage.
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    It's a very unfortunate term.
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    Intangible cultural heritage -
    what does that mean?
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    In French it translates
    as "immaterial heritage,"
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    but is it immaterial?
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    Well, yes, but no.
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    I prefer to call it living culture
    or dynamic traditions.
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    Now, my interest in ICH,
    I think came from my childhood.
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    I grew up in a bilingual home,
    so my mother would speak Irish to me,
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    but the rest of the family spoke English,
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    so as a child, I was aware
    of different cultures and traditions.
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    This was no help to me, though, in 1992,
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    when I met my future German mother-in-law.
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    She didn't speak English,
    and I didn't speak German.
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    Imagine not being on speaking terms
    with your mother-in-law.
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    I think most of you
    are too young for that,
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    but believe you me,
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    not being able to speak
    to your German mother-in-law
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    is an incredibly difficult experience.
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    And I soon realized that there is
    much more differences between us,
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    even though we're near neighbors,
    in European terms,
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    than simply language.
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    Later on, when I went to work in Germany,
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    I found even more problems.
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    Um, marking time is one issue.
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    If I make an appointment
    with you at 10:30,
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    that is the time I expect you to turn up.
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    However, in Germany,
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    if you make an appointment
    with someone for halb zehn,
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    they will actually turn up
    an hour earlier.
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    We mark time in terms
    of time that is gone past;
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    they mark time in terms
    of time that is to come.
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    My German husband and myself
    often disagree on colors.
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    I come from a land that is often described
    as having 40 shades of green,
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    and actually, in Irish Gaelic,
    we have two words for green:
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    we have "glas" and we have "uaine."
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    Now, glas is for a chilly morning,
    a gray horse, green grass,
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    but we would use uaine for a bus.
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    Now, you say to me,
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    "What's the difference between
    the green bus and the green grass?"
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    Well, actually, it's very hard
    to translate into English,
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    but I suppose the best I could say
    is grass grows, therefore grass is glas;
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    a bus does not grow,
    therefore the bus is uaine.
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    So,
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    many cultures have many different
    languages, expressions, traditions -
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    all part of intangible
    cultural heritage, or ICH.
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    Now, you may have seen
    in last week's newspapers
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    how it has been discovered
    with the new thesaurus
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    that there are 421 words
    in Scots for snow.
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    That actually surprises me a bit.
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    If you said to me
    it was 421 words for rain,
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    I would expect that.
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    But apparently, the Scots
    beat the Inuit for words for snow.
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    The Inuit are supposed to have
    50 words for snow,
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    but actually that has since
    been described as a hoax.
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    Okay, so what is the value of that?
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    Well, I think the value of that is huge.
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    First of all, local languages
    reflect the local biodiversity.
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    They also create a sense
    of belonging and social cohesion,
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    but also there's a whole
    industry about Scots.
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    You can buy Gruffalo in Scots;
    you can buy loads of books in Scots.
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    You know yourselves,
    you can buy tea towels,
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    you can buy cups,
    you can buy baby T-shirts -
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    all expressing the words in Scots.
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    So there's a whole economic industry
    going on here as well.
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    Now, oral traditions and expressions
    are just one part of ICH,
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    but there are many others.
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    Performing arts is another,
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    and here I put up a picture
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    of what we would call
    one of our local folk stars, Gary West.
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    Now, Gary West is one of the many people
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    that have played in
    the Celtic Connection festivals,
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    which happens every January in Glasgow.
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    Now, the Celtic Connections
    festival started in 1994,
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    and since then, it has grown
    year after year after year,
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    and a study in 2007 found
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    that for every pound
    invested in this festival,
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    31 pounds came back,
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    so ICH has strong economic potential.
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    Performing arts is another example of ICH.
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    I don't know how many of you have enjoyed
    the Beltane Festival like I did,
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    but Beltane is one of the many rituals
    and social practices and festivals
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    that takes place in Scotland every year.
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    Now, rituals, social
    practices, and festivals
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    are another very important part of ICH.
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    And what are they good for?
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    They're good for the economy.
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    Think of all the tourists
    that come to see Beltane.
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    They're good for our
    mental health and well-being.
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    I mean, consider how good
    you feel at a fire festival.
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    Basically, Beltane is a fire festival.
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    They're also good for tourism
    and mixing with the locals
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    and marking the seasons,
    so they create a sense of environment.
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    I think one of the most underestimated
    contributions Scotland makes to ICH
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    is in terms of knowledge and practices
    concerning the universe.
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    And I just take as an example, John Muir.
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    Now, John Muir was born in Dunbar,
    but spent a lot of time in America,
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    and there he is known
    as the "Father of National Parks,"
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    because John Muir had a vision for nature,
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    a vision that we should all
    enjoy our leisure in nature,
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    that we should all feel good in nature,
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    and that nature should be
    available to everybody.
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    Well, it's not just about nature
    and mental health and well-being;
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    it's also about the economy.
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    So, we now have a new John Muir Way,
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    a 130-mile-long route which is bound
    to bring in the nature tourists.
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    Traditional skills is also
    a very important part of ICH,
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    and I would like to
    point to just one example.
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    In the photograph here,
    we have basket-making,
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    but the example I would like to point to
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    is a special example to me
    which is in government,
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    and it's called the GalGael Trust.
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    And the GalGael Trust
    was set up in the '90s
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    with a desire to give people
    who had been marginalized
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    or people who find life challenging,
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    a new aim in life.
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    They describe it as giving people a chisel
    with which to carve out the future.
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    And they particularly
    focus on boat-building.
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    Now, you may say,
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    "What's the value
    of traditional craftsmanship?"
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    But as you know,
    in this technological age,
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    there is a great desire for people
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    to purchase and engage
    with traditional crafts.
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    That's, of course,
    also good for the environment
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    because usually people like this
    don't exploit local resources,
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    but think about what they
    can hand on for the next generation.
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    Now, if all of that
    hasn't convinced you yet
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    that ICH is really important,
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    I'd like to take a few more examples.
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    You may say to me, "Yeah,
    that's all old-fashioned stuff.
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    It's all for old people;
    it's nothing to do with me."
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    But actually, it isn't.
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    Many of the tradition bearers of ICH
    are way ahead of us in technology.
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    Consider, for example, the Samis.
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    They, in the old days, would,
    with their reindeer husbandry,
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    would gather the reindeer on sleighs.
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    Do they do that now? No.
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    They use snow scooters.
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    Or here, I have an example
    of the Foxwoods Resort in Connecticut,
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    a huge enterprise with casinos,
    spas, golf courses -
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    a huge industry.
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    Now, that huge industry is owned
    by one of the Native American people,
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    who use the income from that
    for their tribal reservations.
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    So again, the economic dimension
    of ICH is extremely important.
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    Another example would be
    the Amazon Indians who use Google Earth.
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    Now, let me tell you how this happened.
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    It happened very simply.
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    One day, the local chief
    went into an internet café.
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    He saw Google Earth
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    and quickly realized the potential
    it would have for his people.
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    So he invited Google Earth in,
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    and they came,
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    and they trained the tribespeople
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    to make YouTubes of their elders
    recording their stories,
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    how to tag their stories,
    and put them up on the internet.
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    Later on, they came back,
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    and they trained these people
    how to use mobile phones
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    because one of the problems
    the Amazon Indians have
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    is illegal logging or illegal
    deforestation of their lands.
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    So now what they do is,
    if somebody's up to something,
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    they take photographs
    and put it up on Google Earth.
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    So that is a perfect example
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    of traditional wisdom
    with modern technology.
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    But of course, there's more.
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    ICH, intangible cultural heritage,
    is all about social inclusion,
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    and here I have an example.
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    I was with guests last Saturday night,
    and they were telling me
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    about this festival from Bengali
    which celebrates the goddess Durga,
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    and it's about gathering clay
    from the homes of prostitutes
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    to make the icon
    of this goddess every year.
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    All the activities around this festival
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    place a very strong emphasis
    on social inclusion.
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    Another example I would like to take
    is one called Art for India,
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    and this was an initiative
    which looked at traditional art forms
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    and discovered they were dying,
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    and they were dying -
    it was a bit of a catch-22 -
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    they were dying, there was
    no opportunities for artists to perform,
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    there was no income coming from it,
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    so they generated
    a whole new revival of these arts,
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    created opportunities for the artists
    to showcase their art,
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    and created networks.
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    So here we've another example
    of traditional crafts plus the economy -
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    everybody gains.
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    Now, if all that doesn't convince you
    that ICH is worth being passionate about,
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    I would like to turn finally
    to the notion of ICH being used
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    as a tool of reconciliation
    or conflict amelioration.
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    We're all familiar with examples
    from ISIS recently,
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    destroying heritage sites -
    tangible heritage - as acts of war.
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    Well, ICH can be harnessed
    to ameliorate those acts of war.
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    Um, here, um -
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    another example of intangible heritage
    that I should refer to first
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    is the Mostar Bridge,
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    which was really destroyed
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    to destroy the memory
    of peoples working together.
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    In this case, it was
    the Bosnians and the Croats.
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    So destroy the tangible heritage,
    destroy the memory.
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    And of course, ICH is all about memory,
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    and lots of wars are about memory
    and about the past.
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    The problem is that these wars
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    are not necessarily
    about the facts of the past;
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    they are about
    the interpretation of the past.
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    And very often war is caused
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    because different people
    interpret the past differently,
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    and they're often in conflict
    with one another.
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    And here's where ICH can come in,
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    because ICH can be used to sit down,
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    get people to talk about
    their understandings of the past,
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    and at least -
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    even if one doesn't agree
    with the other side -
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    at least come into dialogue with them.
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    A very good example of that
    happened in Northern Ireland,
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    where they called it
    "healing through remembering,"
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    and basically they set up
    conversation workshops
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    for people who had different and
    conflicting interpretations of the past
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    so that at least they
    could come to an understanding
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    of what the other side thought.
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    And so it was with
    great pleasure, actually,
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    that I attended Derry / Londonderry
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    celebrating its first
    UK City of Culture in 2013.
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    Hopefully you recognize
    the character of Nessie here.
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    This was a big pageant
    about the character Columba,
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    who in the past had divided communities
    known as Columba or Colmcille,
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    but with the UK City of Culture,
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    they sat down,
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    reconciled their memories,
    told a new story -
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    a new story which harnessed ICH,
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    or intangible cultural heritage,
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    to create a new common
    shared heritage for the city
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    with a view to economic benefit for all.
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    So hopefully by now I've convinced you
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    that ICH is something
    worth thinking about.
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    It's not just about the past;
    it's about the future.
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    It's about social inclusion.
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    It's about the economy.
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    It's about caring for our environment.
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    It's about me; it's about you;
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    it's about future generations.
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    Go raibh maith agat.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Intangible heritage - why should we care? | Prof. Máiréad Nic Craith | TEDxHeriotWattUniversity
Description:

Being an expert on all things to do with heritage, Máiréad was invited by the United Nations in 2011 to advise on access to heritage as a human right. The preservation of intangible heritage is something she is deeply passionate about, and she continues to build on to this awareness and its importance in her work.

Máiréad Nic Craith is Professor of Cultural Heritage at Heriot-Watt University. Her research focuses on different aspects of heritage including literary heritage, multicultural heritage, World Heritage sites, heritage and conflict and heritage and law in a European context. Máiréad has recently co-edited the Blackwell Companion to Heritage.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
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Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
13:35

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