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Vartan Oskanian Addresses The 34th Session Of The UNESCO General Con

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  • Vartan Oskanian Addresses The 34th Session Of The UNESCO General Con

    VARTAN OSKANIAN ADDRESSES THE 34TH SESSION OF THE UNESCO GENERAL CONFERENCE

    armradio.am
    18.10.2007 17:59

    RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian addressed the 34th session of the
    UNESCO General Conference on 17 October. The Minister said, in part:

    "UNESCO provides the platform where humanity's global challenges are
    addressed among equals, placing responsibility on each of us to pursue
    international cooperation in this organization's fields of competence -
    education, science, culture and communication and information. These
    are the areas of human knowledge which are essential for deep and
    successful globalization, fair and equitable globalization, will
    lead to sustainable development and poverty eradication. Our hope,
    of course, is that this is the path to prosperity and peace."

    Mr. Oskanian said Armenia welcomes UNESCO's intention to expand
    its activities in our country. "Armenia's high economic growth and
    positive macroeconomic state have led to the alleviation of some of
    the more obvious social and economic ills. I have repeatedly said
    that our second generation reforms will be the more difficult, the
    more challenging to adopt and implement and this category includes
    the essential but difficult reforms in education and science, culture
    and communication.

    In a country with a proud and ancient record of education and science,
    we are deep in the throes of reforms. With the Bologna measures as
    guide, our students are prepared to undergo yet another period of
    transition - this time to ease their entry into the international
    educational arena.

    The science community too is undergoing restructuring to facilitate
    their integration into international scientific cooperation
    programs. The vibrancy and competitiveness of these fields are
    essential for their own sake, as well as for economic and social
    advancement.

    But dear colleagues, UNESCO's calling card is its commitment to the
    World's Cultural Heritage - the concept and the content. Armenia
    attaches great importance to the organization's efforts to develop
    legal instruments aimed at the protection of the cultural heritage
    of humanity.

    We are diplomats immersed in the world of culture, education and
    science.

    Diplomats and people of the arts and culture are both the
    beneficiaries of dialogue, and perhaps because of that, we feel
    compelled to continually search for non-traditional ways to approach
    the overarching issue of our time: living at peace in a pluralist
    world. Diplomats and cultural workers, like the societies which we
    represent, live in neighborhoods that are not going to change, with
    memories that are not going to go away, and with experiences that are
    irreversible. Therefore, we look for ways to break the barriers of the
    past because we remain convinced that between cultures and countries,
    there must be dialogue and understanding."

    "As a people, serving as the perennial buffer between empires, on the
    most trampled path on earth, Armenians have become living witnesses
    of the benefit of dialogue between and within cultures. We have been
    engaged in that international exchange for ages. Today, we in Armenia
    are among its greatest promoters, especially in our neighborhood.

    Today, Armenia is a cosponsor of the Draft Resolution on "Proclamation
    of an international year for bringing cultures together" that will
    hopefully be adopted by the current session of the General Conference.

    The UNESCO focus on "Demonstrating the importance of exchange and
    dialogue among cultures to social cohesion and reconciliation to
    develop a culture of peace" and "Sustainably protecting and enhancing
    cultural heritage" is welcome. But this sounds hollow if we only do so
    when it's easy to do. When it's easy, cultural heritage is protected
    and exchange and dialogue do take place on their own. When it is
    hard, undesirable and hopeless, that is when UNESCO, its instruments,
    its clout, its ability and willingness to speak in the name of all
    mankind, that is when UNESCO is needed," the Minister said.

    "Armenia appreciates and respects the historical-cultural heritage of
    national minorities, which are within its territory. The destruction
    of timeless monuments in the Soviet period - monuments belonging to
    all religions, not just our ancient Christian churches and monasteries,
    but also mosques - cannot be undone. We can only take pride in what we
    have and protect and preserve them. In fact, the Cemetery of Riataza,
    belonging to Armenia's Yezidi non-Christian minority, Armenian sites
    on the Great Silk Road and Yerevan's exquisite, recently restored
    Blue Mosque are on the waiting list for inclusion in the UNESCO World
    Heritage List.

    In our region, borders have changed frequently and peoples have
    moved and been moved repeatedly. Armenia's ancient civilization has
    established settlements, left behind traces of living communities --
    fountains and bridges, churches and massive religious and artistic
    sculptures. The fate of those monuments is important for their own
    sake, for the sake of artists and historians, but even more so, for
    the sake of a world that must remember its history, must remember
    the legacy of peoples who have come and gone.

    Our interest therefore in the world's cultural heritage is not
    just philosophical. It is very much personal. Our history is indeed
    intertwined with the history of our neighbors, with their history. We
    are dismayed at attempts to ignore this history. We are appalled at
    attempts to undo this history.

    We are not the only ones who have said from this podium that the
    destruction of a people's patrimony is tantamount to destroying their
    memory, their history, their identity. Unfortunately, we have neighbors
    who have built today's identity on a less than real history. And we
    see the trauma and instability that results.

    Once again, we urge UNESCO to send monitors to our region, specifically
    to Nakhijevan, to see and appropriately judge the intentional
    destruction in areas far removed from war and confrontation.

    Prosperity and peace, that is that goal of all UN agencies. In UNESCO,
    we have a better chance of achieving our objectives because our fields
    of interest are those that cross borders and frontiers naturally,
    across differences and distances and across histories and memories,"
    Vartan Oskanian concluded.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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