A/HRC/52/35
63.
Libraries are important common spaces where migrants can interact with the local
population. Many libraries offer specific services to migrants, including general information
about administrative practices, access to information and communications technologies, to
community and support networks to counter social isolation, and to a variety of resources for
integration, education and cultural enrichment. 56 Many of these libraries record and
disseminate information about the cultural resources of migrants, which helps the local
population understand more about the lives of migrants. An example of this is the two-year
intercultural storytelling project, Refugee Lives: a Million Stories, initiated and led by the
Roskilde Libraries in Denmark, in collaboration with the public libraries in Malmö in Sweden
and Cologne in Germany and the Future Library in Athens. The project includes more than
600 stories from refugees who have fled to the European Union in recent years, creating a
digital library of lived experiences. Similarly, the Services to Immigrants and Refugees team
of the Denver Public Library in the United States of America created an audiovisual exhibit
entitled Mementos From Home, which featured immigrants recording stories about items
they had brought with them to the United States and what those objects mean to them.
64.
In the global survey on library services for displaced populations, carried out by the
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions, 57 Veria Central Public
Library in Greece reported that it had organized programming that included cooking lessons
in the library with families from Greece and the Syrian Arab Republic.
65.
“Sesame” is an experimental research project led by the Musée de la Civilisation de
Québec that aims not only to improve access to the Museum, but also to involve people who
experience particular realities (situations of exclusion, marginalization, disability, etc.) in the
design of exhibitions. By working and collaborating with the individuals and communities
concerned, the Museum documents historical aspects of their reality, develops its collections
to reflect them, and sets up contexts for artistic co-creation. As part of this project, L’Espace
Rencontres makes it possible to take account of the often unknown reality of people living in
particular situations, including migrants.
66.
One important way of acknowledging the cultural backgrounds and histories of
migrants is through migration museums and other memory, history and cultural heritage
institutions. That is already done in numerous countries, but should be encouraged
worldwide, not only at a national but also at a local level. Such activities are significant both
for migrants themselves (individually and collectively) and for people in the societies to
which the migrants have come.
67.
Intangible cultural heritage, including oral traditions, histories and life stories, are not
valued equally with tangible heritage and are usually performed outside museums and
galleries. Music, dance, gastronomy and dress are living, everyday heritage resources that
are often disregarded by States. That is a remnant of an outdated dichotomy between high
arts and popular arts. Exhibiting cultural expressions, such as oral stories and storytelling, in
museums and exhibitions confirms their rightful position next to other cultural outputs and
provides opportunities for empathizing with the personal stories of migrants and fostering
intercultural understanding. Such visibility of migrant cultures should take place both in
generic exhibitions in museums and in exhibitions specifically on the history of migration
and events specifically for the migrant communities in question.58 The necessity to safeguard
the intangible cultural heritage of migrants, a clear obligation of States, pushes for measures
to enable migrant communities to counteract their invisibility in the official heritage
discourse by encouraging the inclusion of groups holding distinct cultural identities in the
wider historical narrative of the societies in which they play a role.59
68.
Many admirable such activities have recently been created for people displaced from
Ukraine. For example, the Provincial Public Library in Krakow, Poland, prepared a library
support and assistance plan to support the needs of their Ukrainian community. Such
56
57
58
59
14
See submission by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions.
The resulting guidelines are to be published.
See submission by the Culture Committee of United Cities and Local Governments.
Danilo Giglitto, Luigina Ciolfi and Wolfgang Bosswick, “Building a bridge: opportunities and
challenges for intangible cultural heritage at the intersection of institutions, civic society, and migrant
communities”.
GE.23-01011