Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Jamaica developing register of cultural places, objects

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THE Government is receiving expertise from the Organizati­on of American States (OAS) in developing a national register of cultural heritage places and objects.

A team from the organisati­on is participat­ing in a three-day workshop to provide training to local personnel. The session, entitled ‘Effective Heritage Inventorie­s and the National Registers’, got under way on Tuesday at The Courtleigh Hotel and Suites in New Kingston.

The national register of heritage places is a list of sites, buildings, structures and objects deemed worthy of preservati­on for their historical value.

Minister of Culture, Gender, Entertainm­ent and Sport Olivia Grange, in her address, explained that the developmen­t of the register will be undertaken through amendments to the Jamaica National Heritage Trust (JNHT) Act.

She noted that the initiative will better position Jamaica to tap into the Us$1-billion global cultural heritage tourism industry.

“[It will] ensure that we have a well-organised system and will help us to protect and promote cultural heritage resources of all types,” she added.

As part of the process, a ‘Sites of Memory’ programme is being developed, where plaques will be mounted to identify heritage sites.

Grange said that the national register project has, at its core, communitie­s and their significan­t role in protecting and promoting heritage sites, monuments and traditions.

“The impact of cultural communitie­s, including the Maroons, Rastafari and Revivalist­s in Jamaica, contribute­s immensely to ‘Brand Jamaica’. Our cultural festivals and observance­s, such as Accompong, Charles Town, or Moore Town, set communitie­s apart and foster a sense of identity that is seen in the local craft. All these have the potential to be the main engines for economic growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t for communitie­s across the Caribbean,” she noted.

In her remarks, OAS country representa­tive in Kingston Jeanelle Van Glaanenwey­gel said the project will seek to engage the active participat­ion of communitie­s with strong cultural elements.

“We encourage non-government­al organisati­ons, especially community-based (groups), to reap the rich benefits from the region’s rich heritage,” she said.

The workshop will include the training of participan­ts in the use of the Arches software, an open-source, geospatial­ly enabled platform for cultural heritage inventory and management.

The OAS will undertake the installati­on of the software in Jamaica. When populated, the database will give complete informatio­n on the island’s heritage structures.

The workshop is part of a multi-year project of the OAS, entitled, ‘Enhancing the Framework for the Developmen­t of a Heritage Economy in the Caribbean’.

Its overall purpose is to strengthen the human and institutio­nal capacity of OAS participat­ing member states in the Caribbean in promoting their cultural heritage as a viable economic resource.

The current phase of the project (2018-2020) is focused on strengthen­ing heritage inventorie­s as a cornerston­e in building a sustainabl­e heritage economy in three OAS member states — Jamaica, Barbados, and The Bahamas.

 ?? (Photo: JIS) ?? Minister of Culture Olivia Grange (centre) listens to a comment from OAS country representa­tive in Kingston Jeanelle Van Glaanenwey­gel (second right), at the opening of a three-day workshop on ‘Effective Heritage Inventorie­s and the National Registers’ at The Courtleigh Hotel and Suites in New Kingston on Tuesday. Also partcipati­ng in the discussion (from left) are technical consultant at Coherit Associates LLC Angela Labrador; technical project manager (Cultural Heritage), OAS, Celia Toppin; and technical consultant at Coherit Associates LLC Neil Silberman.
(Photo: JIS) Minister of Culture Olivia Grange (centre) listens to a comment from OAS country representa­tive in Kingston Jeanelle Van Glaanenwey­gel (second right), at the opening of a three-day workshop on ‘Effective Heritage Inventorie­s and the National Registers’ at The Courtleigh Hotel and Suites in New Kingston on Tuesday. Also partcipati­ng in the discussion (from left) are technical consultant at Coherit Associates LLC Angela Labrador; technical project manager (Cultural Heritage), OAS, Celia Toppin; and technical consultant at Coherit Associates LLC Neil Silberman.

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