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It is my pleasure to bring you greetings on behalf of the Secretary-General and staff of the Caribbean Community Secretariat and indeed the entire CARICOM family.
Yet we continue to hear their concerns about the deficiencies of the environment in which they practice their crafts, the lack of tangible resources, the lack of appreciation for their worth, and even the disregard for their contribution to the essence of national development and regional integration.
It seems reasonable to assume that at the heart of such order and restructuring is the need to pay attention to research and documentation of our unique art forms without which our rich heritage would either be lost to posterity or be absorbed or simply high-jacked by those who invest in such activities. Hence it is important that we pay attention to the networks for publishing, projecting the visual arts, development of databases and other resources that sustain cultural products.
It seems reasonable to assume that greater investment must be placed in the avenues for training, harnessing and producing talent, through exposure to role models, masters of the arts, purveyors of our cultural traditions, critics and critiques of the various crafts. We also need to institutionalize opportunities for sharing and documenting experiences that help advance techniques, stimulate the incorporation of new techniques and technologies and help stimulate excellence.
It also seems reasonable to assume that achieving excellence requires placing greater emphasis on management of our cultural resources especially in the era when globalization is redefining our approaches to trade in services, intellectual property rights, making it essential for our small countries in this region to evolve and negotiate policies on the international stage to ensure that our cultural competitiveness is not negated. In this context, there is need for a partnership among the government and the private sector and the cultural workers as a group.
Too often the artists or writer becomes stuck in the past and refuses to embrace the challenges and opportunities of a future world. Too often, however, are the policy makers and politicians blind-sided by the exigencies of economics and the liberalization of trade to pay due attention to the insights of our painters and writers as they try to expose the soul of our economies.
Hopefully our presenters would take bold but realistic steps that would truly help us to fashion sound policies on which to build sustainable resources such as the long awaited Caribbean Foundation for the Culture and the Arts. These are all aspects of creating aesthetics out of our dilemmas.
In discussion with the Honorable Walter Sandriman, Minister of Education and Community Development, Chairman of the CARIFESTA VIII Committee and even more important, Chairman of the Council for Human and Social Development, CARICOM, is resolved that the recommendations from this symposium be discussed at COHSOD IX to be held in Georgetown in October 8-10 and that the proposal for action be taken to the Inter-sessional meeting of Heads of Government to be held in Antigua and Barbuda in February/March 2004.
In the spirit of our cultural heroes, let our discussions be harnessed by the realities of our present environment. Let us be conscious that as we forge our programmes for the future, we are at the cross roads of a new beginning in our regional integration process. It is a process in which our cultural workers are destined to play a critical role. |
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