The Borneo Post

Naples pizza twirling seeks nod as Unesco intangible heritage

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PARIS: Naples’ art of pizza twirling is a candidate to join Unesco’s list of ‘intangible heritage’ next week along with a wealth of other cultural treasures such as Saudi Arabian wall painting and Bangladesh­i cane weaving.

Meeting on the South Korean island of Jeju, the UN cultural body’s World Heritage Committee will also consider whether to give special support for heritage that is struggling to survive.

Naples’ candidacy for pizza twirling has created a buzz in the southern Italian city where the art has been handed down for generation­s – as well as around the world.

Some two million people have joined a petition of support of Naples’ applicatio­n, according to Sergio Miccu, head of the Associatio­n of Neapolitan Pizzaioli, who will be in Jeju for the proceeding­s.

“We’re confident the vote will be favourable,” Miccu told AFP in Rome, adding: “We’ll be giving out free pizza in the streets” if the age-old culinary tradition joins the prestigiou­s list.

The custom goes far beyond the pizzaiolo’s spectacula­r handling of the dough – hurling it into the air in order to ‘oxygenate’ it – to include songs and stories that have turned pizza-making into a timehonour­ed social ritual.

Thirty-four candidates are seeking to join the list of intangible heritage, which currently includes 365 traditions, art forms and practices from Spain’s flamenco dancing to Indonesian batik, to more obscure entries such as a Turkish oil wrestling festival and the Mongolian coaxing ritual for camels.

Saudi Arabia wants to see AlQatt Al-Asin, elaborate interior wall paintings traditiona­lly done by women, inscribed on the list this year. The art, which promotes solidarity among women, is handed down through observatio­n.

For its part, Bangladesh has put forward its tradition of Shital Pati, an intricate weaving craft using strips of green cane to produce mats and bedspreads.

The list of ‘intangible’ cultural treasures was created in 2003, mainly to increase awareness about them, while Unesco also sometimes offers financial or technical support to countries struggling to protect them.

Morocco is sounding the alarm this year for its martial dance called Taskiwin, and Turkey is concerned over its whistled language heritage.

Both are threatened by declining interest in the traditions among young people.

Unesco began compiling a list for cultural and natural world heritage – physical properties such as Cambodia’s Angkor Wat or the Grand Canyon in the United States – in 1972. — AFP

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