The Phnom Penh Post

Cultural art form given UN status

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national program officer for intangible cultural heritage in Phnom Penh, said upon hearing the news yesterday.

The status of urgent safeguard is reserved for heritage items that “may disappear” very soon, Hong explained. “It means the government should take urgent measures to safeguard the intangible cultural item.”

Indeed, the Cambodian Living Arts Associatio­n (CLAA), which took part in the applicatio­n to have chapey recognised, is in the process of scouring the country for surviving “masters” of the instrument, of which there may be as few as 20.

Among them is 70-year-old Kong Nay, the Kingdom’s most famous chapey artist, who yesterday evening told the Post during a break from teaching a class of 14 students at CLAA that he was “over the moon” upon hearing the news.

“To protect the continuati­on of this art form, first, we need to have a working group like the community of living chapeys [those who perform the art], because only with a group like that can chapey dong veng be passed to the next generation,” he said.

Breaking out in song, he said that he had committed himself to completing the documentat­ion of all the chapey songs he knew.

His assistant professor, Sokim Keat, added that because many high-profile chapey masters are blind (including Nay), a challenge has been convincing youth that becoming a chapey player will in fact not lead to blindness.

Cambodia’s UNESCO head, Anne Lemaistre, likened chapey to American blues music.

“I think it’s like a Cambodian blues. I’m quite happy, because I think [that] thanks to Kong Nay, chapey is much more popular now, and it’s a tradition that was being lost,” she said.

Addressing the two rejected applicatio­ns by the government in conjunctio­n with CLAA, UNESCO’s Hong says they failed to clearly mention the “community aspects” of chapey as well as present a clear safeguardi­ng plan. The successful nomination this year was assisted by a workshop funded by the government of Japan, he added.

In an email last night, Lemaistre further disclosed that an applicatio­n for $230,000 had also been approved by the UNESCO Intangible Heritage Committee, meaning that programs proposed by the Ministries of Culture, Fine Arts and Education may well be funded.

While ministry officials could not immediatel­y be reached last night, according to Lemaistre, the proposals include bringing chapey back to the seconday School of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh as a field of study, launching a pilot program to bring chapey to public schools nationally and creating an annual chapey festival.

Given these programs would be a shared project between the government and UNESCO, Lemaistre said “I imagine most of them will be realised”.

 ?? ALESSANDRO MARAZZI SASSOON ?? Chapey artist Kong Nay plays the instrument at the Cambodian Living Arts Associatio­n in Phnom Penh yesterday.
ALESSANDRO MARAZZI SASSOON Chapey artist Kong Nay plays the instrument at the Cambodian Living Arts Associatio­n in Phnom Penh yesterday.

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