Tag Archives: Latin America

Women’s Council for Peace in Colombia created by indigenous women

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article from FILAC – The Fund for the Development of the Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean

Seeking greater political participation and with the intention of working for peace, especially in their community, but also in the country, the indigenous women of Colombia have created a Council of Women for Peace.


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In Colombia, women belonging to the indigenous peoples of the region consider that they have had to face “armed conflict, psychological violence” and even “conflicts in their home”, according to Margarita Rodríguez, an indigenous representative.
 
The council in question was presented along with appropriate rituals and the name Conamic, National Council of Women of Colombia. The group includes representatives of the 10 Colombian indigenous peoples and will immerse itself in the world of politics with the intention of generating peace.

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Question for this article

Do women have a special role to play in the peace movement?

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In Colombia there are more than two million indigenous people belonging to 102 villages, according to the National Indigenous Organization of Colombia, known by its acronym ONIC.
 
Margarita belongs to the Sikuani people. During the meeting in which they made the council official, she revealed that they have been meeting since 2013 and emphasized that it is not a last minute decision, but something that they have been working for and thinking about for some time.
 
Nasa, Pasto, Tanacona, Sikuani, Misak, Emberá, Wayú, Arhuaco, Pijao and Yeral are the names of the ten peoples that make up this council of Colombian indigenous women.
 
For them, the participation and empowerment of women is important, considering the violent situations in which they have been involved, and especially if it is about achieving peace, said Ivonne González, director of human rights at the Ministry of Interior. She added that “having a group of indigenous women today is fundamental because the activism of women was what led to a gender subcommittee in the Havana agreements.”
 
For her part, a council representative present at the Conamic initiation ritual said that “respect for the life, integrity and security of all women is a fundamental duty of the country. We do not want women killed in our territories or outside them.”

(Click here for the Spanish original of this article.)

Latin America Is it possible to develop peace through tourism?

. . SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT . .

An article from Aleteia

Latin American cities will meet to discuss strategies for the generation of peace. The meeting of the Latin American Congress of Tourist Cities will be held with the theme “Building peace from tourism” in the Colombian city of Cartagena de Indias in October.

Between the 25th and 27th of that month, representatives of several countries of the region, united in the Latin American Federation of Tourist Cities – presided over by Paraguay until the year 2020 – will have as an objective to generate a space of integration between the tourist cities of Latin America .

The goal will be “the collective construction of strategies for the generation of peace through tourism based on the socialization of their experiences and good practices”, according to the website of the congress . It will be an instance of reflection from the cultures of the Latin American peoples to establish what they can do to rediscover themselves based on identity and tradition.

This federation, which was born in 2011 in the Peruvian city of Arequipa, includes the countries of Chile, Peru, Brazil, Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina and Uruguay.

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(Click here for the Spanish version)

Question related to this article:

How can tourism promote a culture of peace?

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The country where these aims will be discussed in the near future is nothing more or less than Colombia, a place in the region where the word peace has been resonating for a long time due to various events such as those linked to the peace pact with the guerrillas and the award to its president Juan Manuel Santos of the Nobel Peace Prize.

In addition, this place, shortly before, will be one of the cities that will host Pope Francisco during his visit to the country in September this year.

In this regard, the Vatican recently spoke on the subject of sustainable tourism giving its clear support for the first time in the framework of the Church’s message for the 2017 World Tourism Day. The Church promotes initiatives that put tourism at the service of the integral development of the person. This is in line with its contribution to peace.

Nor is the religious aspect exempt from the projects of this federation. For example, in the early days of August, the Latin American Symposium on Local Religious History was held in Valparaíso, Chile, where an initiative called “Ruta de la Fe” was discussed, an idea that seeks to integrate religious tourism destinations in Latin America.

The Congress scheduled for October comes at a time when in several cities of the world there is talk of violence and hatred against tourists. This happens in several countries like Mexico, Germany and Spain.

For example, in Barcelona masked youth punctured the wheels of a tourist bus, and in the district of Kreuzberg (Berlin) some bars hang a sign in the door: “No service to tourists” according to a recent report by Macelo López Cambronero to Aleteia.

At this time the reflection on the construction of peace from tourism appears especially timely and healthy.

Colombia: When indigenous knowledge heals and prevents the wounds of war

. . SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT . .

An article by Paola Jinneth Silva Melo from Propria Agenda

With rituals and ancestral knowledge the indigenous communities in Putumayo are developing processes of healing and forgiveness of the people who were affected in the context of the armed conflict. In this southern region of the country, 13,697 indigenous victims of violence have been recorded.

“When the boys and girls began to weave our necklaces and handles, I realized that in someof them, their physical and emotional state was not balanced. Their hands and eyes could not assure to see the hole of the chaquira with the needle.” It was in this way that Mama Emerenciana discovered that some people were victims of sexual violence.

This 54-year-old woman from the Kamentsá indigenous community in Sibundoy, Putumayo, teaches how to weave and to express Kansá sayings on necklaces and bracelets, facilitating a space of trust and word that allows the stories of children, girls and women victims of the armed conflict to be heard.

“We had to talk to families and especially to indigenous men and leaders who did not want to touch the issue. Since then our Corporación Madre Tierra [Mother Earth Corporation], which I lead, seeks to address and prevent sexual violence through indigenous knowledge, “says Mama Emerenciana.

The indigenous leader knows that the armed conflict has divided the communities, which lost their own rules of conduct, leading to sexual and domestic violence, which according to the Network of Women Victims has been hidden, and which is the second greatest cause that leads children and adolescents to join armed groups.

Her idea is that as people weave bracelets and ancestral collars, it is possible to rebuild social bonds, mend and heal with their own art the emotional damages of those who come to her NGO. It has been a work that at the same time rescues the thought of its indigenous culture, very fragmented by the war, and which prevented children and women from exposing themselves and talking about these cases.

Her therapy relies on other medicines such as yagé ceremonies in order to regain self-esteem and as an alternative of differential psychosocial care while the State makes an effective presence.

[Editor’s note: yagé is an entheogen, a native tea that was kept secret by native societies until the 1950s when it was discovered by the Western world, which developed it into psychedelic therapy].

The indigenous communities in Putumayo have been victims of dispossession, recruitment, sexual violence, the outbreak of their territories, and thus cultural loss. According to figures from the Register of Victims (RUV) of the 179,371 indigenous victims, 13,697 belong to this region of the Colombian Amazon.

But how and with what knowledge?

In the Putumayense context where 14 indigenous peoples live together, ancestral knowledge has been important for the recovery of the social fabric. There wise grandmothers, ‘taitas’ (traditional doctors) and professionals in different areas, work to complement each other and rely on the task of achieving confidence, self-esteem, tranquility and peace of their own.

“Knowledge is in thought, it is the knowledge that communities have acquired in permanent relationship with themselves and with everything that surrounds their territory. And for us right there is healing. It is not enough to care for an indigenous victim by only addressing the physical or psychological damages. For any indigenous community to be healthy means to be in harmony in every way, “says Tania Laisuna, social innovator of the Nuh Jay Collective.

She, like Valentina Gonzales of the human rights NGO Casa Amazonia, emphasizes that the ancestral knowledge brings to the victims, knowledge that has always existed in the indigenous communities but which the West ignores.

“In their culture it is a daily practice to resort to wise women, taitas and shamans because from traditional medicines, ceremonial plants and practices there are many elements that allow what they call harmonizations, to treat victims of violence, find a place In the territory, restore energies, recover a sense of trust and identity, “explains Valentina.

It is as if the knowledge were the tool of reconnection to the tranquility that was robbed from them by the war. The knowledge persists thanks to the “mothers, taitas, shamans, sinchis, jaibanas, healers, medicine men and women, who have kept it alive . Such knowledge allows us to reconnect with our essence, through its ceremonies, its sacred rituals, its dances, its songs, its myths and legends, with the use of a great diversity of sacred plants, as is the case with yage, tobacco, mambe, ambil, aguacoya and many more,” says Taita Alfonso, of the Inga people.

Among the wisdom of the communities are the medicines, with the idea is to apply them when there is no disease. “Medicine is to be well and in harmony, it is a whole. It is in the food, in the chagra (orchard), in the yagé take to prevent, guide, heal. But it is also in the relationship with nature and with others. And the healing is in reconnecting with the earth, recognizing and purifying our own body,” asserts Taita Miguel Shindoy of the municipality of Sibundoy.

And with that invisible energy to reconnect the human being have been woven networks to strengthen the purpose of recovering the cultural, social, territory and self-esteem that war destroys. Thus was born a great team that in its beginning was known as the Cocas.

Women and knowledge in action

Sirley Celis is 34 years old, is a psychologist; She resigned her work in psychiatric hospitals of Bucaramanga and arrived at Putumayo nine years ago behind a plant, yagé. Tania Laisuna is from Pasto and has specialized in learning methodologies inspired by ancestral knowledge. Sandra Vargas and Valentina Gonzales are social communicators and head the Corporación Casa Amazonia -COCA. All were called by this land of ancestors to work for the harmony of peoples after the cycles of war.

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(Click here for the Spanish version of this article.)

Question for this article

Indigenous peoples, Are they the true guardians of nature?

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Sirley says that the yagé allowed her to discover that the electro-convulsive therapies and sedation psychiatry was harmful, so she decided to look in the mountains for other alternatives to heal. “I discovered in nature that one can achieve balance and harmony, and I saw in the yagé an opportunity to do psychotherapeutic work.”

Thus she began to work with population victims of the armed conflict, especially women and children who saw their relatives killed and had with them the traumas left by the terror of violence.

“We looked for the emotions of the indigenous people but they did not know that could express them and make them count. Throughout this process we understood that the knowledge that is part of their worldview would give us the intervention strategies. ”

The first thing was to leave the desk and change the language. “We began to realize circles of the word, which is the first form of union of indigenous communities and which in psychology is known as supportive or group therapy. And according to the objective of meeting with the affected communities we could make mandalas or circles of fire, “he says.

Methodologies that she learned and strengthened later thanks to the collective Nuh Jay in the head of Tania Laisuna, who is host to temazcales, dances of peace, listening circles and social technologies considered methodologies that integrate ancestral and contemporary knowledge to meet the current needs.

In this work of social work in a wounded territory they met with Casa Amazonia, who accompanying children, adolescents and women in their process of restitution of rights. They understood that these realities can be addressed in different ways and “what we have seen and corroborated, is that alternative knowledge generates a collective work that strengthens the communities while allowing support for individual processes of recovery and healing, “says Valentina de Casa Amazonia.

Back to the womb to be reborn

One had to find a way to arrive from a language, and there was a universal one: The earth and its elements. Thus were adopted methodologies such as the Temazcal used by Taita Alfonso of the Inga community and who accompanies in this medicine through the NGO Casa Amazonia. The Casa Amazonia has facilitated this practice in schools in rural areas dispersed in the department to strengthen and guide the life purpose of children and adolescents who live with conflict, illegality, domestic violence and abandonment by the state.

Temazcal is a ritual of Central American communities, which resembles a sauna, where several stones acquire the energy from a large bonfire and are put into a hut to be used in a ritual with songs, icaros chants, instruments, and medicinal plants. Their aromas strengthen the purpose of the encounter.

“The temazcal represents the womb. When we enter we return to the womb of the mother with the idea that when we leave the temazcal we will be reborn as new men or women, clean and without disease as we first arrived in this world,” says Taita Afonso.

“When we have done it with raped women, it has helped to clean and make a historical reconstruction of the body, to cry, to endure the heat and to find calm on earth. A person who is a victim of sexual violence could never cleanse the body only with words. Plants and aromas do the job, “explains Sirley.

Dances of Peace

Likewise, songs and dances have their own power as spaces to harmonize the communities and ask forgiveness. This is the case of the Big Day in Sibundoy, which is a meeting to dance, holding hands with other people, crossing words and looking into each other’s eyes, allowing us to break the fears that violence sowed over our own neighbors.

“In the west it has been called peace dances, turning them into a worldwide methodology where many people dance and sing to create spaces of trust in communities where vulnerability, fears, sadness are present and where you can generate an environment to recognize the body , Accept yourself, improve self-esteem, deepen release, heal, listen, “says Tania.

These ancestral practices have also been complemented by experiences such as the ‘mambeadero’, which is a great ‘laboratory of ideas, good thoughts that become a word of life, a word that guides, where a story, a myth or a legend always leaves a teaching to enhance life, to plan a project or to reap the fruit of what was said. It is necessary to have patience, discipline and resistance to listen to the grandfather or who guides a circle of words,” clarifies Taita Alfonso, who also mentions the importance of accompanying the word with medicine.

“Master plants are used, ambil, mambe, coca and tobacco, in perfect alliance, not to put the person into a trance, but to clarify the thought or as food while taking the Caguana, a drink that does not intoxicate but sweetens the word” .

All this is done with the care and guidance of the wise grandparents of the indigenous communities. Although their voices are not recognized by the State, they have survived with their knowledge of violence and are today, as before, vital for the construction of peace.

An example is that of Sirley and Taita Alfonso. Although coming from different cultural origins, today they work together in a joint project, the Ecoaldea Anaconda del Sur, responding to the call to resume and recognize that the wisdom of the people lives on this land and that it is a valid way to build community, to heal, reach consensus and improve ways of life in line with a new community environment.

“Putumayo is a department of people born in its forests and mountains. Among its wealth is silence and magic songs to comfort those who have lost loved ones; The leaves of nettle to purify the body; the brew of Yagé so that the expression of the jaguars and nature can give us back our balanced nature and speak to us with languages ​​and colors.” says Mom Emerenciana. Every time you are knitting something you should think of the person who can use it so that when it is seen with the bracelets or necklaces it highlights its beauty, its worth, its dignity. And think of abused children and girls. She knows that the principle of everything is to think beautiful thoughts and to heal and to prevent the pains of the war in a region violent by its riches, but wise by its peoples.

Note. This story was written within the framework of the Journalistic Challenges led by the editorial board of the organization of journalists – with the support of the DW Akademie. AGENDA PROPIA publishes the history with the purpose of contributing to its visibility.

(Thanks to Myrian Castello, the CPNN reporter for this article)

Brazil: Restorative Justice: AJURIS and its Judiciary School sign agreement with Terre des Hommes and MPRS

. . DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION . .

An article from the AJURIS Superior School of the Judiciary of the State of Rio Grande do Sul

On August 11, in addition to marking the 73-year foundation of AJURIS [The Association of Judges of Rio Grande do Sul], as of today also marks a historic moment of strengthening ties between AJURIS, its Judiciary School, the Public Ministry of Rio Grande do Sul and the Canadian institute Terre des Hommes, with the signing of two agreements of inter-institutional cooperation for the strengthening of Restorative Justice and the construction of peace.

The organizations are in unanimous agreement that the country is going through a perioe of great social tension and it needs the promotion of dialogue, accountability and justice for the victims through restorative methods. The event was opened by two pioneers in Restorative Justice studies in the State and in the country, AJURIS vice-president Vera Deboni and Leoberto Brancher, the Coordinator of the Restorative Justice Program for the 21st Century of the Court of Justice of Rio Grande do Sol.

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(Click here for the original article in Portuguese)

Discussion question

Restorative justice, What does it look like in practice?

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AJURIS President Gilberto Schäfer said that the words that best expressed the moment were joy and gratitude for the formalization of the partnerships: with the Public Prosecutor’s Office, for the relevance in the Justice System, and with the Terre des Hommes, an organization present in 36 countries that is internationally recognized for promoting restorative juvenile justice: “We need to think of new ways to resolve conflicts as we are losing the ability to dialogue.”

The head of the Brazilian delegation of the Terre des Hommes Institute, based in Lausanne, Switzerland, Renato Pedrosa spoke about AJURIS which is recognized nationally as a reference in Restorative Justice and stressed that “the prosecution approach this way of doing justice is innovative,” he said, citing the pioneering of State. According to Pedrosa, the partnership is one of the important elements of Terre des Hommes planning, which, until 2030, aims to promote Restorative Justice in Brazil and Latin America.

Representing the Public Ministry of Rio Grande do Sul (MPRS), the Assistant Attorney General for Legal Affairs and coordinator of the Mediar Program, Cezar Faccioli, spoke about the satisfaction of the MPRS in arriving at this moment, in which a major change of culture is being proposed: “We started from a good place,” he said. In Faccioli’s evaluation, restorative methods open “the possibility of consensus and dialogue” and it would be important to include the entire Justice System, including non-state. “Produce justice by making peace,” he concluded.

The Director of the School of AJURIS, Judge Cláudio Luís Martinewski, also highlighted the relevance of the agreements and expressed the expectation that, increasingly, the result of these actions will expand and produce changes in society. The event also celebrated the 13 years of creation of the AJURIS School of Restorative Justice, where Martinewski also formalized the investiture of judges Fábio Vieira Heerdt and Andrea Hoch Cenne as vice-coordinators.

Gravatá, Pernambuco, Brazil: Combating violence against women now in the classroom

. . WOMEN’S EQUALITY . .

An article from the Prefeitura de Gravatá

A partnership between the Women’s Secretariat and the Department of Education will bring to debate the importance of the Maria da Penha Law to municipal schools, as well as raise students’ awareness of the need to combat violence against women, to prevent domestic violence and to build a culture of peace.


Project members: The City Secretary for Women, Taciana Medeiros, is in center dressed in dark blue

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Question related to this article:

Protecting women and girls against violence, Is progress being made?

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[Editor’s note: Maria da Penha, a victim of domestic violence by her husband, fought for her attacker to be condemned and is now a leader of the movement for the defense of women’s rights. As a result, on August 7, 2006, the president of Brazil Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva put into practice the Federal Brazilian Law 11340, now known as the Law Maria da Penha, in which the severity of punishment for domestic violence against women was increased.]

This morning (August 14), a meeting was held with managers and educators of the municipal school system to present the need to develop activities on the subject with children and adolescents and to elaborate a plan of action.

Entitled “Maria da Penha goes to School”, the project works on education as the best form of prevention. The City Secretary for Women, Taciana Medeiros, highlights the participation of students as fundamental for building a better future.

She affirms that “Educating children and adolescents, teaching to respect and live in harmony is the best way to combat violence, we need to invest in the training of conscious individuals.”

Schools must carry out activities by the end of September.

(Click here for the original version in Portuguese)

Brazil: Open Letter convenes World Social Forum 2018 in Salvador

FREE FLOW OF INFORMATION

Letter from the World Social Forum 2018

The Brazilian Collective of Organizations and Social Movements, which is the articulating space of the WSF 2018, is hereby inviting the people, organizations, social movements, networks and platforms of movements from Brazil, Latin America and the World to join the process of organization and implementation of the 2018 World Social Forum to be held in Brazil, from March 13 to 17, 2018, in Salvador, Bahia.


Baiano Collective for the WSF

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The International Council of the WSF, at its latest meeting in January 2017 in Porto Alegre, considered it urgent and necessary to hold a world edition of the WSF in March 2018, in Salvador, due to the severity of the economic, social, environmental and economic crises, including the crisis of democratic values that mankind is experiencing. The growth of reactionary and authoritarian thought, in Brazil, in Latin America and in the World, places us all advocates of a new world in the framework of solidarity, social justice, democracy and peace, in a state of alert and permanent mobilization, and demands a process of articulation and world unity of social movements for the struggle of resistance and transformation of the chaotic reality that afflicts humanity.

The World Social Forum has consolidated itself as an open space of horizontal and plural encounter for the democratic debate of ideas, the formulation of proposals, the free exchange of experiences and the articulation for effective actions by organizations and movements of the planetary civil society that oppose the control by capital and by any form of imperialism. It is a worldwide process that seeks to build alternatives to neoliberal globalization and has sought to strengthen the articulations of social movements, networks and other forms of articulation of civil society in national and international spheres increasing the capacity of social resistance, with plurality, to the process dehumanization that the world is experiencing.

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(Click here for the article in French.)

Question for this article:

World Social Forums, Advancing the Global Movement for a Culture of Peace?

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In this sense, facing the serious global civilization crisis, the WSF 2018, in Salvador, is a great opportunity to unite alter-globalist movements to think common solutions for humanity, in a democratic perspective of solidarity and respect for diversities, that seek to face the causes of various forms of violence and of social and regional inequalities.

Brazil and Bahia, in particular, are spaces where resistance movements have expanded in recent months in the face of attacks by national and international conservative sectors. Here, it is sought to reflect on the errors and achievements of the strategies adopted by democratic and popular forces in the latest historical period. For this reason, an edition of the WSF in Salvador will be a great opportunity to unite these various experiences of resisting, in a fraternal and committed way, to think about effective actions to confront the authoritarian thoughts that take shape in Brazil and in the World.

The choice of the motto, to resist is to create, to resist is to transform indicates that, for the Brazilian Collective, our resistance carries the germ of the new. We understand that in this world-wide process of peoples’ struggles, territories and movements against neoliberalism, against imperialism and against environmental degradation, we are constructing, in practice, day-to-day alternatives to another possible world.

Therefore, the WSF International Council and the WSF 2018 Facilitation Committee call on the world citizens committed to the construction of a society that is solidaire, radically democratic, environmentally sustainable and socially just, to join the process of organizing and holding the 2018 World Social Forum. The participation of all and everyone is fundamental to the future of our utopias.

São Paulo, August 18, 2017

Brazilian Collective of the WSF 2018

Replies should be sent to: forumsocialmundial@fsm2018.org or through the website www.fsm2018.org. Please let us know your name and organization in your reply to this WSF call

Councils, commissions and some initiatives of culture of peace in Brazil

.. DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION ..

An article by Myrian Castello, Fábrica dos Sonhos

Through initiatives and projects, some cities in Brazil have been promoting a culture of peace. The Culture of Peace, as opposed to the culture of war, aims to promote education for peace, human rights, sustainable and equitable development, participatory democracy, gender equality, free flow of information, tolerance and solidarity as a means of achieving and building peace.

Research about initiatives, commissions and councils made for this article found activities including interviews, forums, trainings, talk wheels and courses, in the cities of Londrina, Curitiba, Itapecerica da Serra, Santos and Recife.

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Questions for this article:

How can culture of peace be developed at the municipal level?

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In Londrina there is Compaz, a council that works to develop the culture of peace and non-violence and the Peace Media that is the media vehicle to spread the news of this culture in the region. More information can be found at this link.

In Itapecerica da Serra, there was a Peace Walk in honor of women.

In São José dos Campos through the education secretary, in the axis of Human Rights Education, activities were promoted for a culture of peace, including a Festival of Circular Dances and Culture of Peace.

Santos officially has an active Peace Commission and recently promoted the 1st Peace and Non-Violence Forum within the schedule of Education Week. The city has the potential to become a reference to the world on a culture of peace.

In Recife, the Community Center of Peace, COMPAZ Eduardo Campos, offers various services and activities with the purpose of guaranteeing social inclusion and community strengthening. More information can be found on their Web site and Facebook page.

Actions and initiatives like these and others are important to promote a culture of peace, which is necessary and urgent to change the culture of war in which we are inserted.

(Click here for the original article in Portuguese.)

El Salvador: Workshop for municipalities to strengthen their role in prevention of violence

.. DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION ..

An article from La Prensa Grafica

About 25 municipalities, belonging to the departments of San Vicente, Cuscatlán and Cabañas, participated in a training workshop organized by the Corporations of the Republic of El Salvador (COMURES) in Cojutepeque (Cuscatlán), with the objective of strengthening the role of municipal governments in the prevention of violence and their capacities to respond to the problems that are currently affecting the country.

The activity, which is part of the national day that COMURES develops from July 18 to August 29, 2017, at the scale of the 14 Departmental Councils of Municipalities (CDA), is carried out in coordination with the Secretariat of Governance of the Presidency, with the participation of the Legislative Assembly and the accompaniment of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).

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Questions for this article:

How can culture of peace be developed at the municipal level?

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The purpose is to facilitate coordination between municipalities with various instances, such as public security, mainly to carry out actions and initiatives to prevent violence and crime in the territory.

Carlos Roberto Pinto Guardado, executive director of COMURES, explained that because of their impact on economic and social development, citizen security and violence prevention are issues that have been prioritized by municipal governments in the National Congresses of Municipalities, and incorporated In the permanent agenda promoted by the corporation.

“The approach of the theme seeks to strengthen a strategy that allows strengthening the leadership and role of municipal governments, for the construction of a sustained culture of peace with the participation of communities,” COMURES said in a statement.

“This is important,” said Pinto Guardado, “since municipal councils, as the first state authority in the municipalities, know the most sensitive needs and problems of the population, invest resources and implement policies and actions that are coordinated, organized and planned to reduce the factors that generate social violence in the territory.

Along these lines, COMURES with the support of cooperation agencies has created different instruments and tools.

(Click here for the Spanish original of this article)

Puebla, Mexico: Cultural tourism needs more spaces and collectivity

. . SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT . .

An article from Angula 7 (translated by CPNN)

In Puebla, the culture for tourism is concentrated in specific points such as the Historic Center. It is “worrisome” that this serves economic interests, rather than promoting general development. This was pointed out by Arturo Villaseñor García, spokesman of Colectivos Estación Cero, in an interview at the first “National Colloquium on Living and Community Culture”. He added that these cultural policies do not take into account the problems of living in communities and neighborhoods.

“We are concerned that this exercise of centralizing or concentrating culture and having a bias to culture towards a particular type of art, or artistic expression, fails to take advantage of the knowledge of our peoples,” he said.

He referred to the “privatization” of the public space. Certain spaces are dedicated to former rulers, for example, the International Baroque Museum (MIB), instead of dedicating places to the culture of the communities .

In Angelópolis, he said, cultural tourism focuses on the first picture of the city and a few spaces in the surrounding urban region, but these are very limited, while in other areas of the interior of the state as the Mixteca Poblana there are no workshops or activities. As for San Martín Texmelucan, there are no museums, no resources, no support for groups that focus on cultural issues.

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(Click here for the Spanish version)

Question related to this article:

How can tourism promote a culture of peace?

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“Decentralizing the cultural offer”

In that vein, he argued that past state administrations, instead of building the MIB or the Puebla Star that had “a high cost,” could have used the money to open spaces in which young people could develop their creativities.

“In the Historic Center there is a focus on tourism. This is OK, but only a part of what is needed. There is not much for the citizens. We need to decentralize the cultural offer and involve the communities, in order to generate collectivity, recreation and art as a motor of development and a culture of peace, “he said.

Villaseñor García added that, in addition to this, there is the problem that resources for culture have been reduced. This a problem because because there is little money, and groups are forced to compete for limited resources.

He pointed out that what is needed in Puebla is to open spaces and begin to develop public policy in general, since it is not only culture that is needed, but also theater, painting, dance, and other artistic expressions.

Finally, he indicated that these problems will be addressed in the national colloquium to be held in October in Mexico City, attended by groups from other states where their concerns will be raised, in order to elaborate a policy to promote a diversity of cultural and artistic expressions, to develop strategies and to promote a national agenda on the subject.

Colombia: Tourism in post-conflict zones, another contribution to peace

. . SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT . .

An article from Aleteia (translated by CPNN)

The Colombian government is launching a call for tour operators to set up travel packages in postconflict areas.

Visiting them can be an unforgettable adventure. For example, located in the Colombian department of Magdalena, in the north of the country, in the Sierra Nevada area of ​​Santa Marta, Ciudad Perdida, also known as Teyuna, is an extremely attractive place by nature with crystalline waters and indigenous peoples.

Considered one of the main archaeological sites of Colombia, rediscovered by a team of local researchers in the 70’s and a reference area at the political level in its time, this place is positioned as a tourist destination that seeks to be enhanced.

But Ciudad Perdida has also been affected by the Colombian conflict, hence a place that has known much suffering.

Along with this Colombian locality other places like Sierra de La Macarena in the department of Meta, or Golfo Urabá – Darién (Chocó, Antioquia) have become part of a pilot plan of the Colombian government denominated “Tourism, Peace and Coexistence”.

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(Click here for the Spanish version)

Question related to this article:

How can tourism promote a culture of peace?

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This is precisely one of the goals of the Colombian government – through the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Tourism – to make a clear commitment to tourism in post-conflict zones. In that sense, a strong call for travel agents was recently launched to include these areas in their packages and proposals. In March of this year, a set of actions in favor of work among the various communities involved had also been submitted to the government for consideration, among other things.

Is it possible to build peace from tourism?

“If entrepreneurs do not sell, do not package, do not work hand in hand with post-conflict regions to generate development, peace will not be lasting. So it is important to take tourism companies to those regions that previously did not allow any type of development because of violence, “said Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism, María Claudia Lacouture, reproduces El País.

As early as 2014, when the work on the post-conflict zones strategy was announced, tourism was considered “an important development factor that generates territories of peace”. “Tourism is a tool for the territories in the process of transformation towards a culture of peace. It is a sector that contributes to sustainable development, to the empowerment of communities in their territories, and it can generate other industries”, according to the strategy developed at that time.

One of the objectives visualized at that time was “the construction of the social fabric and a culture around tourism and peace”.

The scenario has now changed and indeed Colombia has now entered the post-conflict period. The challenge is before us and now it is the operators who have in their hands the possibility of giving more space to these proposals.

That is what it is about now, the development of these areas that have suffered in the past – for the best possible future for its inhabitants and sustainability guidelines for a better care of nature.