Low Graphics Site
White bar
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition

April 6, 2003 Sunday Safar 3, 1424





Never forget what must be remembered



By Julio Godoy


PARIS: We would like future generations to remember so much, of course. It is a harder job figuring out what we would like them to remember.

A Memory of the World Register Programme of UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation) is looking to do just that. The register was opened in 1997. Now, six years later, it includes about 70 sets of documents from around the world.

So what figures in the Top 70, or at least the first 70?

Documents from the Argentinean National Archives, the original German score of Ludwig van Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, the South African Bleek Collection, the collected writings of Venezuelan Simon Bolivar. The register covers already some of the most important documents in history and culture.

— The Argentinean documentation was collected and archived in Buenos Aires, the administrative centre of the Viceroyalty during the Spanish domination of Latin America. The archive includes also collections from colonial times from Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, and a district in Peru (Puno). Other documents record the port activities of Buenos Aires and Montevideo and the relations between the Viceroyalty and other countries.

— The Ninth Symphony of Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) is one of the world’s best-known compositions. Its influence on the history of music has been decisive and intense. This “Ode to Joy” which sets a poem of Friedrich von Schiller to music, is now a symbol of peace between nations and peoples.

— The Bleek Collection comprises the papers of ethnologist Dr W.H.I. Bleek (1827-1875) and others on San (described earlier as Bushman) language and folklore. The material provides invaluable insight into the language, life and stories of the people.

— The writings of Simon Bolivar, the Venezuelan independence hero, are a political, social, and military record still relevant to the affairs of American and European countries.

The register continues to grow. A group of experts met at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris last week to examine 40 new nominations from 25 countries.

These include an archive on human rights in Chile, on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in France in 1789, and the original recordings of the legendary tango singer from Buenos Aires, Carlos Gardel.

Croatia, Ecuador, Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Saudi Arabia and Tajikistan were among the countries that sent nominations. Among the new nominations is ‘free software’ which has been proposed as a part of the heritage of mankind.

“The final decision on which of these collections will be admitted in our programme will be taken by the UNESCO director- general on the recommendation of a group of experts,” says Joie Springer who heads the project. The next meeting is due in Gdansk in Poland in August.

The first documents were picked at a meeting in Tashkent in Uzbekistan in September 1997. Other such meetings followed in Vienna, Austria, in June 1999, and in Cheongju city in the People’s Republic of China in June 2001.

Nominations must come from UNESCO member countries. “The nominations must concern documentations of world interest, represented in any form such as film, photography, printed material or manuscripts,” says Springer. They cannot relate to a work in progress.

Abdelaziz Abid, member of UNESCO’s general information programme, says precious documents, if not whole chunks of the world documentary heritage, disappear every year through so- called natural causes.

Among these ‘natural causes’ Abid lists ‘acidified paper that crumbles to dust, leather, parchment, film, and magnetic tape attacked by light, heat, humidity or dust.’ Floods, fires, hurricanes, storms, and earthquakes regularly afflict libraries and archives, Abid says.

The massive floods in Central Europe last year partially destroyed valuable documentation in Germany, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Poland.

“War, in particular the two world wars, caused considerable losses,” Abid says. “Numerous libraries and archives have been destroyed or badly damaged in the course of fighting, notably in France, Germany, Italy, and Poland.”

War has also led to destruction of libraries and archives in former Yugoslavia. Shelling of the university library of Bosnia and Herzegovina started a fire that destroyed the building and most of its collections.

Many books in the library had been salvaged from collections in libraries damaged during World War II.

Such destruction continues today in Iraq and in other areas ravaged by war. “It would take a very long time to compile a list of all the libraries and archives destroyed or seriously damaged by acts of war, bombardment, and fire, whether deliberate or accidental,” Abid says.

The most endangered collections are not necessarily the oldest. Substantial numbers of audio discs and tapes are lost each year. The world of cinema has had to live with the decay of polymers used to record sounds and images. —Dawn/InterPress News Service.






Previous Story Top of Page

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2005