Information about Vietnam’s intangible cultural heritage will be preserved as part of a larger archive of heritage for the Asia-Pacific region. |
The director of the Vietnam National Institute of Culture and Arts Studies (VICAS), Bui Hoai Son, said the institute had been participating in a project to build ichlinks, a platform with information about the intangible cultural heritage of the Asia-Pacific region.
This project is expected to connect and share content with member countries at the website https://www.ichlinks.com.
“ichlinks stores more than 1,000 data, content and information on the intangible cultural heritage of member countries in the Asia-Pacific region via images, videos, and audio and text formats. The site will offer advanced search tools and information management features,” Son said.
He said that ichlinks was established by the Korean Cultural Heritage Department and the International Information and Networking Centre for Intangible Cultural Heritage in the Asia-Pacific Region (ICHCAP) and supported by UNESCO.
The first group of participating partner countries includes Malaysia, Mongolia, Vietnam (represented by VICAS), Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.
According to the deputy director of the Cultural Heritage Data Centre (under VICAS), Vu Dieu Trung, information about Vietnamese heritage has been “integrated” into ichlinks.
“ICHCAP has helped us make 10 anthropological films about intangible heritage, and all are online. Seven films about cultural heritage have been registered by UNESCO. ichlinks has collected data from the Cutural Heritage Association and other bases," she said.
Joining ichlinks, Vietnam has the opportunity to promote its image and heritage to the world.
“ICHCAP itself is a Tier 2 unit of UNESCO, funded by UNESCO to help member countries build a common digital platform on intangible cultural heritage and promote it. When participating in it, they have the right to promote images of Vietnam’s intangible cultural heritage abroad. This is the best benefit,” she said.
Another benefit is the opportunity to digitise the system of national heritage information. From 1997 to 2020, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism built a target programme to preserve the culture of Vietnamese ethnic groups. The ministry will allocate one to two cultural heritage conservation programmes to each province.
VICAS is the main recipient of archival video tapes for the target programme, and has worked with the programme for over 20 years.
“The institute has an archive of nearly 1,000 similar cultural heritage items. With the new project, ichlinks will boost the digitisation process. They have provided equipment to VICAS to digitise the tape system,” Trung said.
In addition to reconstructing old documents or documents of recognised heritage sites, ichlinks helps “rescue” items of cultural heritage that have not been preserved or properly preserved.
“After Mrs. Ha Thi Cau, the last artist of Xam art, passed away, it seemed like the art had been lost, but Xam singing clubs are now active in Hai Phong. ichlinks can help us conduct new research and support the community to redevelop this legacy,” Trung added.
Source: Vietnam News
Hanoi has two more national intangible cultural heritages
The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has recorgnized two traditional festivals of Hanoi as national intangible cultural heritages - “Moc villages festival” and “The sisterhood celebration ceremony between Phu My and Kieu Mai villages”.
Family of ‘Xam’ artists uphold traditional folk art
Late artist Ha Thi Cau is remembered as an advocate for the Vietnamese folk singing genre ‘Xam’.