Among the many significant legacies passed on from generation to
generation are economic prosperity, a healthy environment, world peace,
and cultural heritage. In recent years, the preservation of
‘non-physical’ heritage -- local traditions, cultural expressions, and
their practitioners -- has also emerged as one of the urgent priorities
in light of the diminishing of valuable cultural heritage in modern
times.
At the center of this movement resides UNESCO’s
Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH), for which the Korean government
provided an intriguing perspective with its safeguarding system for ICH
entitled ”Living Human Treasures,” and its initial proposal to launch
such a project with a worldwide scope in 1993.
“The Republic of
Korea provided a conceptual impetus and marked a milestone in the
history of UNESCO’s ICH programme,” says Noriko Aikawa-Faure, the former
Director of UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage Unit. “The Living
Human Treasures” project contributed to focusing the attention of member
states on the significant role that practitioners, actors, and creators
play in enacting and transmitting a particular heritage.”
While
assisting countries like Cambodia and Fiji to establish the Living
Human Treasures system with funds-in-trust that are endowed within
UNESCO, Korea has continuously strived to ensure the viability of such
heritage within the practitioners’ communities back home. Through
organizing annual cultural festivals, such as Gangneung Danoje and
Hansan Mosi Cultural Festival, the nation seeks to remind us of the
importance of the transmission of invaluable heritage.
Hansan Mosi: Preserving the past, promoting the future of Korean aesthetics Every
early June, the grounds of Seocheon County turn into a venue for the
Hansan Mosi Cultural Festival (www.mosi.go.kr), providing general
audiences the opportunity to enjoy the delicate and sophisticated beauty
of the Hanbok, Korea’s national costume made of mosi (fine ramie),
alongside various hands-on activities. This year’s event, held from June
8 to 10, was particularly meaningful as it marked the first edition to
take place since the recent addition of the technique of mosi-weaving in
the Hansan region into UNESCO’s ICH List last November.
Acclaimed
Hanbok designer Lee Young Hee sent her ramie dresses down the runway,
dazzling the audience amid the presence of dozens of foreign diplomatic
envoys and ambassadors to Korea. Visitors also had an opportunity to try
out the weaving process with the guidance of a practitioner alongside a
number of other hands-on activities.
A foreign tourist participates in a hands-on ramie fabric-weaving
activity offered at the Hansan Mosi Cultural Festival (photo courtesy of
Seocheon County). “Mosi is as finely weaved as the
wings of a dragonfly. The more you wear it, the stronger it gets. And to
whomever wears it, the material gives a sense of elegance,” says Bang
Yeon-ok, a mosi-weaving master.
The eco-friendly fiber whose
legacy dates back to the Baekje Kingdom is known for its thin and fine
texture, as pure and refined as white porcelain. Its extremely light
weight made the fabric favored for summer clothing. Along with the
recent recognition by UNESCO, the history and excellence of the natural
fabric, which accentuates the artistic character of the wearer, has
received renewed attention and wide acclaim.
The tradition is
reputed for involving a series of months-long processes, from
harvesting, boiling, and bleaching ramie plants to yarn-spinning and
final weaving on a traditional loom, which requires endurance and
devotion.
Models exhibit collections made of mosi fabrics by Lee Young Hee at her
haute couture fashion show in Paris in July 2010, boasting a fine
exhibition of her exquisite works. Lee also put on a fashion show for
this year’s festival in Seocheon (photo courtesy of the Maison de Lee
Young Hee). Mosi-weaving is a traditional cultural
practice handed down from generation to generation by middle-aged women
in the Hansan region of South Chungcheong Province. The weaving
technique is characterized by its method of inheritance through female
family members, in which the mothers transmit the traditions to their
daughters or daughters-in-law.
Mosi-weaving allegedly went on to
be inscribed by UNESCO for its engagement in binding the community and
its potential to enhance the global recognition of the diversity of
hand-woven textiles. As of today, there are approximately 500 people in
the region who still practice the technique.
“I wish more and
more young generation would learn the weaving of mosi, a technique which
has become a heritage for humanity,” says the 66-year-old Bang. “It is
my vision and duty to set groundwork for the mosi-weaving technique to
remain in existence from generation to generation.”
Gangneung Danoje Festival: centuries-old traditions revived Efforts
to assure and revitalize the transmission of traditional cultural
practices are also found in the region of Gangneung City. Throughout
June, Gangneung celebrates its thousand-year-old traditions of Dano, a
Korean traditional holiday falling on the fifth day of the fifth lunar
month.
Derived from the ancient village festival serving
shamanic rituals and festivities dedicated to agricultural cycles,
Danoje ceremonies were passed on to pray to for a rich harvest and an
abundant catch alongside peace in the village and the health of all the
residents.
Along with Seollal and Chuseok, Dano is considered one of the most
important traditional Korean holidays. The festival was proclaimed to be
added in the UNESCO representative list in 2005, joining other heritage
which humanity should preserve and pass down to future generations
(photo courtesy of the Gangneung Danoje Festival Committee). Gangneung
Danoje Festival is well known for its wide variety of folk play
performances, also inviting participants to experience traditional
customs and folk games from riding old-style swings to washing one’s
hair with a changpo (sweet flag) mix.
The Gwanno Mask Dance
pantomime stands out among the diverse traditional performances, even
impressing Sung Kim, the U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Korea, who
paid a visit to Gangneung on June 8.
“I came to the city to
experience the cultural richness of the home of Gangneung Danoje, the
Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity,” remarked Sung Kim while
complimenting the Gwanno Mask Dance, which delivers a clear message to
the audience through pantomime.
Ambassador Sung Kim (left) joins a mask dance troupe during a visit to
Seongyojang -- a well-preserved traditional aristocratic house -- in the
city of Gangnueng (photo courtesy of Gangneung City). In
light of the ever-growing attention on ICH preservation, the
Gangneung-based Inter-City Intangible Cultural Cooperation Network
(ICCN) officially became an accredited NGO for providing advisory
services to the intangible cultural heritage committee of UNESCO on June
7 -- at the fourth session of the General Assembly of the States
Parties to the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural
Heritage.
Founded in 2008 in conformity with the spirit of the
convention, the ICCN (www.iccn.or.kr) is committed to the safeguarding
of intangible cultural heritage with the participation of local
authorities from 29 cities of 21 nations. Upon the recent accreditation,
the international organization has gained new momentum and is expected
to spur its activities in the field of care of local intangible cultural
heritage and community relations, to preserve heritage that is on the
verge of extinction. As part of its promotion of intangible cultural
heritage as a mainspring of cultural diversity and a guarantee of
sustainable development, the ICCN will host the 2012 ICCN World
Intangible Culture Festival (www.iccnfestival.com) in Gangneung this
October.
Ever since UNESCO gave shape to a concrete plan to
protect intangible heritage in 2001, which was superseded in 2008 by the
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists, Korea has turned out 14
items, including Jongmyo jerye (royal ancestral rite and ritual music)
and pansori (traditional Korean opera) along with the Gangneung Danoje
Festival and the weaving of mosi in the Hansan region. For more
information on UNESCO Treasures in Korea, please visit here:
www.korea.net/AboutKorea/Culture-and-the-Arts/UNESCO-Treasures-in-Korea.
By Hwang Dana
Korea.net Staff Writer