UNESCO honours Vietnam’s art of pottery making of Cham people
The decision was made at the ongoing 17th session of the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage taking place in Rabat, the capital of Morocco, from November 28 to December 3.
Addressing the announcement ceremony on November 29 (local time), Le Thi Thu Hien, director of the Department of Cultural Heritage, thanked UNESCO for the recognition, and affirmed that the government and especially the Cham community in Vietnam are committed to doing their best to safeguard this precious heritage.
The art of pottery making of the Cham people is Vietnam’s 15th intangible cultural heritage inscribed by UNESCO, and also the fourth UNESCO title Vietnam has won this year, following three other titles awarded to a collection of handwritten Chinese and Nom documents in Truong Luu village of central Ha Tinh province, the 78 “ma nhai” steles on Ngu Hanh Son Mountain in central Da Nang city, and the learning city of Cao Lanh in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap.

According to the dossier submitted to UNESCO, Cham pottery products are mainly household utensils, religious objects and fine art works, including jars, pots, trays and vases. They are made by women and viewed as an expression of individual creativity based on the knowledge transmitted within the community.
Instead of using a turntable, the women revolve around the piece to shape it. The pottery is not glazed but fired outdoors with firewood and straw for seven to eight hours, at a temperature of about 800 degrees Celsius. Raw materials (clay, sand, water, firewood and straw) are collected locally, and the knowledge and skills are passed on to younger generations within families through hands-on practice.
The practice gives women the opportunity to exchange and interact with each other in productive labour and social activities as well as in vocational education for their children, further enhancing their role in society. It can also help bolster family income and safeguard the habits, customs and cultural identities of Cham people in Vietnam.
However, despite many safeguarding efforts, the viability of the craft is still at risk for several reasons, including the impact of urbanization on access to raw materials, insufficient adaptation to the market economy and lack of interest among younger generations.
The post UNESCO honours Vietnam’s art of pottery making of Cham people appeared first on Vietexplorer.com.
View more from VietExplorer:
Compulsory COVID-19 related insurance a must for inbound, outbound travellers: expertsVillage in clouds on top of Ba Na hills
Vietnamese football club’s players strike over 7 months of unpaid wage
Meet the Vietnamese high school senior whose love for nature is inspiring an entire community
Stamps featuring ancient Oc Eo Culture issued
HBSO presents German romantic night
Vietnam’s leading expert on venomous snakes
Hanoi-Style Crab Noodle Soup
Foreign investment into Vietnam up sharply
Hanoi ceremony marks 60th anniversary of Cuba’s Giron victory
Committee asked to promote role in legislature’s operations
The Red Map brings audience into the world of contemporary performance art
Vietnam’s 10 destinations selected by tourists for upcoming holiday
Portrait by late Vietnamese painter fetches record US$3.1 million at auction
TikTok love story of Australian – Vietnamese couple that gone viral with 40 millions views
Vietnam TV host quits job to cycle across Vietnam and Southeast Asia
Minister Nguyen Van Hung: Vietnam tourism misses an important ‘battle’
Top 8 famous French colonial architecture sites in Hanoi
Australia, UNICEF donate AUD13.5 million to support Covid-19 vaccination in Vietnam
‘Portrait of Mademoiselle Phuong’: the most expensive Vietnamese painting
Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét