UNESCO adds Suiti culture to list of heritages in need of safeguarding

The Suiti culture of Latvia’s Kurzeme province—perhaps best known for its colorful folk costumes and distinctive singing style—is in need of “urgent safeguarding,” according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

The organization’s Committee for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Heritage, meeting in Abu Dhabi, has named the Suiti as one of the first 12 cultures or cultural practices added to the “List of Intangible Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding,” UNESCO announced Oct. 1.

The Suiti, who are Catholic, are today located primarily in three parishes—Alsunga, Gudenieki and Jūrkalne—according to the Web site www.suitunovads.lv. The Web site’s creators want the Latvian government to establish a distinct administrative district for the Suiti.

According to UNESCO, only a few older people have a good knowledge of Suiti cultural traditions. In all, about 2,000 people belong to the culture.

“The Suiti cultural space is characterized by a number of distinct features,” according to UNESCO, “including vocal drone singing performed by Suiti women, wedding traditions, colourful traditional costumes, the Suiti language, local cuisine, religious traditions, celebrations of the annual cycle, and a remarkable number of folk songs, dances and melodies recorded in this community.”

An urgent need exists to spread the cultural heritage and to involve more people in its preservation, the UNESCO committee said. In its application to UNESCO, the Suiti community warned that its language is the most endangered and could disappear within 20 years.

The community’s application listed a number of measures that have been proposed to preserve Suiti culture, such as teaching children to play the kokle, organizing summer camps to teach children Suiti traditions and restoring the Alsunga castle, which would become home for the Suiti Culture Research Centre.

A video about the Suiti culture may be viewed on the UNESCO Web site.

Also added to the “List of Intangible Heritage in Need of Urgent Safeguarding” were:

  • The Kalyady Tsars (Christmas Tsars) ritual and festive event celebrated in the village of Semezhava in the Minsk region of Belarus.
  • China’s Qiang New Year festival from the province of Sichuan.
  • Traditional design and practices for building the wooden arch bridges found in China’s Fujian and Zhejiang provinces.
  • The traditional textile techniques of spinning, dyeing, weaving and embroidering used by the Li people in China’s Hainan Province.
  • The secular and liturgical oral tradition known as paghjella and found on the French island of Corsica.
  • The traditions and practices of the Mijikenda ethnic groups associated with the sacred Kaya forests in Kenya.
  • The Sanké collective fishing rite found among people in the Ségou region of Mali.
  • The traditional folk dance performed by ethnic groups in Khovd and Uvs provinces of Mongolia.
  • The Tuuli oral tradition of heroic epics from Mongolia.
  • The traditional music of Mongolia performed on a wooden wind instrument known as the tsuur, which combines the sounds of both the instrument and the human throat.
  • The sung poetry of the Ca trù style found in the north of Vietnam.

The song festival tradition of Latvia was added to UNESCO’s list of intangible cultural heritage in 2003. That list, however, does not suggest cultural elements are endangered.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Jauna latviešu skoliņa Vācijā

Vācijas pilsētā Bonnā tiek veidota un dibināta jauna latviešu bērnu svētdienas skoliņa “Kamolītis”. Tiek uzņemti bērni vecumā no 3 lidz 10 gadiem. Jaunākā grupiņa 3-5 g.v., vecākā 6-10 g.v.

2010. gada sākumā skolai tiks atvēlēta telpa Godesberger Allee (Friesdorf).

Skolas nodarbibās tiks aktualizētas tēmas, kas saistītas ar Latviju, lai mūsu bērni svešumā neaizmirst savu zemi, tās tradīcijas, dziesmas, svētkus un valodu. Bērni uzzinās daudz ko jaunu un pie reizes arī atpūtīsies, iepazīsies un gūs motivāciju runāt latviski. Nodarbības vadīs sākumskolas skolotāja Zane Priede. Visus Bonnas apkārtnē dzīvojošos latviešu bērnus aicina pieteikties pie Priedes, lai varētu sarunāt pirmo kopējo tikšanos (telefons +49 0151 50900283 vai pa e-pastu zanepriede77@gmail.com.

Atbalstu skolai izteikusi Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība (PBLA), kā arī tiek uzņemti pirmie kontakti ar līdzīgu skoliņu Luksemburgā.

Kā stāsta Priede, “Tas nekas, ja Jūsu bērni nerunā labi latviski; mēs atradīsim kopēju valodu!”

Survey seeks input from U.S. Latvians on next Saeima election

To help prepare for the next Saeima election in 2010, the Latvian Embassy in Washington, D.C., and the American Latvian Association have organized a survey of Latvian citizens in the United States.

Results of the survey, according to the embassy and the ALA, will be used to help determine the number and location of polling stations in the United States. Polling stations are set up by Latvia’s Central Election Commission on the advice of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The number of Latvians citizens voting in the United States has decreased with each parliamentary election. During the last election in 2006, a total of 1,479 citizens in United States cast ballots. Four years earlier, in the 2002 election, a total of 1,698 ballots were cast, while the 1998 election saw 2,928 votes.

During the 2006 election, polling stations in the United States were set up in Boston; Chicago; Cleveland, Ohio; Los Angeles; Minneapolis, Minn.; New York; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Seattle, Wash., and Washington, D.C.

Other countries with large exile generation populations also have seen declines in voting. However, in countries such as Ireland and the United Kingdom, where a surge in new immigrants from Latvia has been recorded, the number of voters has jumped.

The 11-question, three-page Latvian-language survey asks about potential voters’ motivation to cast ballots in the next election as well as the best way to publicize information about the election. Survey results also will be used to understand what changes might be necessary in the election process.

Completed surveys should be returned by Oct. 31 to the embassy by e-mail to embassy.usa@mfa.gov.lv, by fax to +1 (202) 328-2860, or by postal mail to Embassy of Latvia, 2306 Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Washington, DC 20008.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.