MUMBAI, MARCH, 2022.
Indian Hotels Company (IHCL), India’s largest hospitality company,
has announced that it will collaborate with UNESCO to help preserve and
promote the intangible cultural heritage of India, as part of a major new initiative
meant to transform the travel landscape in the post pandemic world.
Together, IHCL and UNESCO
will offer experiential tours for travelers at various IHCL hotels, so that they can
experience the living heritage of the country better. The first phase will
include visits to local communities practicing art forms like Patachitra–
a traditional scroll painting technique in West Bengal, Ganga Aarti –
the prayer ceremony at Dasashwamedh Ghat at Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh,
as well as Kalbelia performances, blue pottery making, Bagruhand block
printing, and the Terracota art of Molela. Visitors will also be able to
experience the unique tribal life of the Bishnoi village in Rajasthan, and
Mysuru Dasara and Janpadaloka in Karnataka.
Speaking on the occasion, Gaurav Pokhariyal, Senior Vice President &
Global Head – Human Resources, IHCL, said, “Long been
heralded as the custodians of Indian heritage, IHCL for over a century, has
been providing sustainable platforms that preserve and promote local art and
culture. We are delighted to partner with UNESCO in this industry-first
collaboration to work towards preserving India’s intangible cultural heritage.
Leveraging our business strengths, value chains and partner networks, IHCL
hotels will work towards a holistic plan to safeguard the living heritage of
the country while empowering local communities.”
Eric Falt, Director and Representative, UNESCO South Asia said, “Together
with IHCL, we want to showcase to Indians and foreigners alike, the diversity
of India’s living heritage. The objective is that when they visit an IHCL
hotel, they are offered a chance to discover at least one cultural practice
they have probably never witnessed before. Rather than bringing a dance troupe
to their hotel, we will bring the visitors to the practitioners of that art
form – in the midst of their community. They will see their pride, they will
see their uniqueness, they will see the incredible diversity of intangible
India.”
The 2003 UNESCO
Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, adopted by 178
countries, emphasizes the importance of Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) for
ensuring cultural diversity. ICH represents the “living” heritage of a country
and is made up of practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, and
skills, including instruments, objects, arte facts, and cultural spaces that
communities, groups and, in some cases, individuals, recognize as part of their
cultural heritage.