Take A Trip To Argentina To Help Save The Tango!
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Learning to Tango in Argentina can be just as important as visiting a rainforest…….
There are a whole host of festival and events that may well rely on your visit to survive the next 30 years or so.
I’m not talking about the modern Rio Carnival or Oktoberfest - I’m talking about traditions that have lived for centuries in small communities across the world.
UNESCO has set about preserving these traditions with their Intangible Cultural Heritage scheme - to which they have recently added the Tango - but which holds many many more already including many little known cultural delights from across the globe.
Take for example, the Indonesian Wayang Puppet Theatre. This art of story telling has been used in Indonesia for 10 thousand years, across the royal courts and in towns and villages, to bring the regions epic history to life.
There is still an interest in the puppets - either 3-dimensional or brought alive by shadows - accompanied by musicians and singers, but it is having to compete with television and the internet for viewers.
By making sure you add a visit to a traditional theatre show on your trip to the area, you could be making sure that it is worth continuing the tradion and worth training for. Would you invest your time learning a skill that people might not need in 5 years?
Or a trip to Mexico in late fall could coincide with the huge festival: el dia de los muertos - the Day of the Dead. Thousands of local villagers spend the day in celebration of their lost loved ones who are said to come alive for the day and to bring properity and good luck to the families.
Cultural Heritage:
We all know how important it is to encourage traditions and festivals, but of course we need to make sure that we don’t make them into a side show, like the Kayan women from Thailand have become, but we want to make sure that they know the importance of their traditions.
Also, they do not want to freeze cultures in time. There is no intention to force people to continue with customs that are no longer relevant, but to empower cultures with their past - rather than force them into an uncomfortable future.
Things like Morris Dancing in the UK are well known not to be a part of modern culture - yet we all love the tradition of the dancing and the people who dress up for this know the history and pass on the reasons behind the colors and the stick-bashing!
Society will always evolve - but why not hold on to the things that were once important. Hopefully governments are working with these groups to make sure that these traditions are not lost forever like many languages around the world have been.


