The Nairamdal Camp in Ulaanbaatar is all set to host a five-day training workshop on developing safeguarding plans for intangible cultural heritage from 23-27 May 2016. This capacity-building workshop is the outcome of joint efforts by UNESCO Beijing Office, the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science of Mongolia, the Center of Cultural Heritage of Mongolia and the Mongolian National Commission for UNESCO.
The workshop is aimed at enhancing capacities of Mongolian stakeholders in elaborating safeguarding measures for intangible cultural heritage under the 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage. 33 participants will attend this workshop, comprising cultural officers from all 21 provinces of Mongolia, government officials and ICH practitioners representing selected ICH elements.
Utilizing newly developed training modules on ICH safeguarding, two UNESCO-accredited facilitators will give theoretical sessions and present a step-by-step guide for developing safeguarding plans. Participants will subsequently be engaged in an entertaining role-play on a fictional case study in which they will explore how communities play different roles as primary actors in the preparation and execution of safeguarding measures for their ICH. The knowledge acquired will then be applied to three selected Mongolian ICH elements: the TsagaanSar (White Month) Festival, the custom of naming and giving ablution to a child and the Mongolian traditional craftsmanship of bow and arrow.
The Nairamdal Camp in Ulaanbaatar is all set to host a five-day training workshop on developing safeguarding plans for intangible cultural heritage from 23-27 May 2016. This capacity-building workshop is the outcome of joint efforts by UNESCO Beijing Office, the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science of Mongolia, the Center of Cultural Heritage of Mongolia and the Mongolian National Commission for UNESCO.
The workshop is aimed at enhancing capacities of Mongolian stakeholders in elaborating safeguarding measures for intangible cultural heritage under the 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage. 33 participants will attend this workshop, comprising cultural officers from all 21 provinces of Mongolia, government officials and ICH practitioners representing selected ICH elements.
Utilizing newly developed training modules on ICH safeguarding, two UNESCO-accredited facilitators will give theoretical sessions and present a step-by-step guide for developing safeguarding plans. Participants will subsequently be engaged in an entertaining role-play on a fictional case study in which they will explore how communities play different roles as primary actors in the preparation and execution of safeguarding measures for their ICH. The knowledge acquired will then be applied to three selected Mongolian ICH elements: the TsagaanSar (White Month) Festival, the custom of naming and giving ablution to a child and the Mongolian traditional craftsmanship of bow and arrow.