Just over a year since independence, South Sudan is working with the
United Nations to preserve its most important historical, natural and cultural
sites for future generations to enjoy. The U.N. Educational Scientific and
Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, is in South Sudan wrapping up a workshop to
help the nation identify potential world heritage sites.
The three day workshop, held by South Sudan’s Ministry of Culture -- in
partnership with UNESCO and the African World Heritage Fund -- is aimed at
helping East African nations build their capacity to preserve natural, cultural
and historic sites across the region. Representatives from Rwanda, Kenya,
Uganda, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti and the Seychelles attended the
event in Juba.
UNESCO has helped preserve some of the world's most famous sites, including Egypt's Pyramids of Giza, the Great Wall of China, Mount Kenya National Park and the Nubian Pyramids at Meroe in Sudan. South Sudan's Undersecretary for Culture, Jok Madut Jok, will now be cataloguing its important sites.
"By putting some of our most valuable sites on this list we hope that the World Community; the donor Countries, the NGOs that work in conservation will help assis us to protect and maintain and conserve these important sites such as the wild life parks and cultural sites such as shrines," Jok said.
Before, Southerners did not have the means to preserve such places
during more than 20 years of civil war with Sudan. The Sudanese government
routinely denied South Sudan the political power and economic support needed to
establish such sites.
Many South Sudanese may not even be
aware of their country’s historic and natural sites. Millions were forced to
flee to neighboring countries during the war, and those that stayed had little
opportunity to learn about South Sudan history and culture.
Undersecretary Jok said many places should be preserved.
“There are what we refer to as the
intangible culture which is the cultural practices of the people of South Sudan
from artwork to dancing-to music, to paintings and all that. Then there is
tangible heritage which is referring to actual material production of the
people such as the burial sites, {and} the rock art,” Jok said.
South Sudan was also part of the vast
slave-trading network crisscrossing Africa. Jos said establishing historical
sites along that route will preserve the memory of the slave trade.
Jok said it is important to also preserve natural resources such as Nimule
National Park and Boma National Park – both of which host some of the largest
animal migrations in the world.
Many South Sudanese officials support preservation of the country’s resources
and historical sites, but UNESCO’s culture specialist Elke Selter said that
enthusiasm must be matched by strong government action.
“The major challenge at this point is
to have the appropriate legislation. You need to have your national system in
place so you basically have a site which has a value; sometimes we call the
outstanding value which is the value that goes beyond the national importance,”
Selter said.
The country is creating a national
archive of important historical documents, but the project has only a handful
of staff and right now is housed in a tent in Juba.