Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Amagugu Heritage Trust named Unesco advisor

- Bruce Ndlovu

ONE of the bastions of culture in the country, Amagugu Heritage Trust, has been named as an advisor to the Unesco’s Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH), a prestigiou­s role that will see it occupy an internatio­nal position that no Zimbabwean cultural organisati­on ever has.

At the invitation of Unesco, Amagugu participat­ed as an observer at the 7th General Assembly of the Intangible Cultural Heritage Convention held in Paris, France from 4 to 6 June.

It was at the Paris convention that Amagugu came tops in a shortlist of 29 cultural organisati­ons from across the globe to become only the second Africa-based organisati­on to have the privilege of playing an official advisory role to Unesco.

In a statement, Amagugu acknowledg­ed the gravity of the recognitio­n by Unesco.

“Article 9 of the Unesco ICH Convention provides for accreditat­ion of advisory organisati­ons with recognised competence in the field of intangible cultural heritage. From a total of fifty applicatio­ns for accreditat­ion by NGOs, a total of 29 were accredited at the 7th General Assembly.

Two Africa-based NGOs were accredited, AIHC and Mali Cultural Heritage Agency from Mali, joining nine other Africa-based NGOs already accredited with Unesco. A total of 147 NGOs were already accredited ahead of the 7th General Assembly. AIHC becomes the first Zimbabwean institutio­n to be accorded the accreditat­ion status,” the statement read.

Founded in 2010 by renowned historian and cultural activist Pathisa Nyathi, Amagugu is situated 60km along the Bulawayo-Kezi Road. It organises a variety of cultural, educationa­l and recreation­al programmes for the public to learn and appreciate different facets of indigenous heritage, history and culture.

In an interview, Nyathi said the latest honour was largely due to his work alongside Amagugu officer Kgosi Nyathi.

“I bring knowledge to the table but that would be useless if I didn’t know how to package it. That’s where Kgosi comes into the picture. The

way we complement each other works well

within the Amagugu context. That’s over and

beyond our father-son relationsh­ip,” he said.

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