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RESPECT ALL CULTURES, SAYS CARICOM SECRETARY-GENERAL

(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown, Guyana) Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretary General His Excellency Edwin Carrington has called on the Community to respect and promote the principles of cultural diversity, and to ensure that the Community is a place built on mutual understanding and respect for all cultures.

In his message to mark World Day for Cultural Diversity (21 May 2008), Secretary General Carrington acknowledged the key role of cultural understanding, cooperation and awareness to the effective implementation of the Community’s flagship programme, the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME), asserting that “the foundation of our regionalism is located in the common historical and cultural heritage of the Caribbean.”

According to the Secretary General, the promotion of cultural diversity, safeguarding cultural heritage and developing creative industries were priority areas in CARICOM.

“Culture is central to building a sense of community, of ensuring that the people of the Region feel connected and “intensely Caribbean,” and thereby forging a regional identity,” the CARICOM Secretary General opined.

In this regard, Mr Carrington noted that CARICOM’s regional agenda for culture acknowledged and celebrated the richness of the cultural diversity of the Region. He pointed to the evolution of national and regional cultural policies in Member States and averred that such policies should be “cognisant of and responsive to the unique historical and cultural realities of our people, taking account of the often adverse legacies and impact of slavery, indentureship and colonial rule that have shaped our Caribbean contemporary society.”

The CARICOM Secretary General also acknowledged the need for the Community to create opportunities for the full development of the creativity of its young people, noting that this was central to the development of the Region’s culture agenda.

“Youth must be engaged both because they are primary producers and consumers of culture, and also as a strategy for diverting youthful energy into positive avenues, and away from risky behaviour,” Mr Carrington stated.

He pointed to the Caribbean Festival of Arts (CARIFESTA), as one vehicle that presented excellent opportunities for youth engagement and exposure and further called on the Community to support the tenth staging of the region’s premier cultural festival, which is slated to take place on 22-31 August in Guyana.

The CARICOM Secretary General also acknowledged the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) for taking the lead in observing 21 May as World Day for Cultural Diversity, in accordance with the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions which entered into force on 18 March 2007.

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