HH Princess Dana Firasاضافة اعلان
UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for Cultural Heritage, President
of the Petra National Trust
In 2015, the year world leaders signed the Paris Agreement
and committed to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), I called for the
adoption of an 18th SDG on Culture and Heritage. I did so because any
meaningful action for the betterment of human lives and our natural environment
requires culture-based strategies.
Six years later, during this coming together of world
leaders, activists, and professionals at COP26 in Glasgow, I will once again
make that urgent call and join other activists to launch the Climate Heritage
Network Race to Resilience Campaign. But this time we stand together in recognition
of the integral role that culture, heritage and the arts play in the
development of sustained, durable and real action on climate change.
According to UNESCO, the term cultural heritage encompasses
“tangible cultural heritage” divided into three categories: immovable assets,
which include monuments and archaeological sites; movable assets, including
paintings, sculptures, coins, and manuscripts; and underwater assets including
shipwrecks, underwater ruins, and cities. In addition, cultural heritage also
encompasses “intangible cultural heritage”. This includes oral traditions,
performing arts, rituals, as well as knowledge derived from the development and
experience of human practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, and
skills.
Jordan has over 100,000 archeological places, with 15,500
sites formally documented and registered, in addition to a rich and diverse
intangible cultural heritage. This wealth of cultural heritage assets is a
significant contributor to its economic and development goals through tourism
(which alone made up 15 percent of Jordan’s GDP in 2019), services,
handicrafts, and the cultural industries (museums, art and music, film
production, etc.). They are also components of national values, identity, and
social cohesion.
Not only does climate change impact the physical places that
fall within the definition of cultural heritage, but also impacts the
relationship that people have to these places and to one another — all critical
to our ability to mitigate and adapt to climate change.
The International Council on Monuments and Sites has
concluded “climate change has become one of the most significant and fastest
growing threats to people and their cultural heritage worldwide.” Increased
temperatures will damage fragile rock structures, particularly sandstone, in
which the monuments of Petra are carved. Extreme weather phenomena will also
inflict significant damage to archeological sites and built heritage including
manuscripts and artifacts contained in some of them. Increased evaporation will
alter humidity levels and will impact sites like Qusayr Amra, Petra, and the
churches of northern Jordan where murals and wall paintings will suffer from
corrosion, mold, and salt damage. There is significant loss and
often-irreversible damage to cultural heritage as a result of climate induced
fires, winds, droughts, and changes in precipitation, flooding, and extreme
weather phenomena.
Climate change in equal measure causes change, damage, and
loss to intangible cultural heritage. The decline and disappearance of
vegetation, plant, and animal species changes important cultural practices,
food systems and traditional culinary skills, medicinal herbs and traditions,
and most importantly the loss of food security. Climate induced damage and loss
results in a change in people’s relationship with each other, with the land and
with the places they identify with. This causes an evolution in the sense of
identity and values, and a loss of traditional stories, rituals, and traditions
that are no longer set in an identifiable cultural landscape.
It is predicted that climate change impacts will result in
migration and the movement of people globally. In Jordan, this will cause
significant stress on urban areas, already heavily populated, as their populations
increase and add economic and social stress on an already stretched system from
regional migration.
Ultimately climate change will impact people’s lives,
livelihoods, and their way of life; reshaping economies, landscapes and
communities.
Equally, without cultural heritage our efforts to mitigate
and survive climate change will not be complete. We need culture, heritage, and
the arts to survive but also to thrive in spite of climate change. The key to
this lies in building resilience, which includes the capacity to transform, the
capacity to persist and the capacity to adapt.
Culture, heritage, and the arts are the key to all three
components of resilience. Culture-based strategies open a multiplicity of
pathways built on traditional systems of social cohesion and communal strength
to enable people to cope with stress and change. They focus on inherited values
of trust, social networks, and place attachment, all critical to how
communities come together and survive in times of challenge.
Culture-based strategies focus on important but often
unrecognized local, traditional, and indigenous knowledge, as well as
traditional technologies, including techniques and innovation through practice
and adaptation. They acknowledge resource-based livelihoods, traditional use of
the land and sea for subsistence, and sustainable management approaches.
The ancient hydrological systems of the Nabataeans, for
example, hold invaluable lessons for our approach to water harvesting,
collection, distribution, and use. And there are many lessons to be learnt from
traditional building practices, use of material, and agricultural techniques
among many others.
We now know that any successful effort at real action for
change will require global and society-wide transformation implemented at all
levels and among all communities. This wide buy-in can only be achieved when
all communities are understood and acknowledged. Culture-based strategies
incorporate unique and diverse worldviews and belief systems and related rites
and rituals, sacred natural sites, mythologies, spirituality, languages, and
values. Culture provides both the capacity for dialogue and exchange, which
fosters interconnectedness and emphasizes adaptive learning, including the role
of creativity and inspiration in adaptation and innovation.
We anticipate the need for urgent, rapid, and far-reaching
measures. We know that change is difficult, disruptive, and often unfair.
Culture embodies within it an intangible quality that remains critical for
human wellbeing and peace of mind. It is a celebration of beauty, of history,
of human connection. It defines our national identity and what is important to
us. It expresses our national character. In our collective efforts to begin the
process of evolution and transformation in our production and consumption
patterns, and our lifestyles, our national character matters. It will be the
glue that holds together our communities and the necessary reminder that we are
doing this for us and for generations to come.
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