A/76/178
23. While mixing and fusion are constant, purity claims are aberrational, reflecting
fantasy rather than reality. Purity and authenticity-based approaches to culture and to
relations between (and within) diverse cultures often fail to reflect the complexity of
human experience and undermine the reality of cultural heterogeneity with a range of
negative consequences for human rights. The insistence on cultural purity can lead to
the decimation of those deemed to taint that purity, to violence and obliteration of
individuals and groups. Processes of cultural cleansing and cultural engineering have
been carried out by an array of nationalist Governments, fundamentalists and
extremists, and others aiming to defend such claimed “purity” and eradicate evidence
that challenges it (A/71/317, paras. 36–37).
24. Cultural purity is sometimes ascribed to particular groups, especially marginalized
groups, even for positive motives. Such approaches may unintentionally purvey
stereotypes about such persons and represent them as trapped in the past. Many actors
may attempt to police assumed cultural borders they have themselves erected in their
imaginations, such as by telling those in their own group who convert to a different
religious tradition that they may not simultaneously engage in traditional practices or
visit traditional cultural or religious sites. Governments may only or primarily finance
cultural projects carried out by members of some ethnic groups or those that are seen to
be ethnically based rather than multi-ethnic or intercultural, or promote certain identities
and cultural heritages, or “ethnicization,” through cultural policies and programming.
25. Disciplines such as art history and cultural studies, and advocacy by cultural
rights defenders, have long grappled with the issues in the present report. 25 However,
those debates have been insufficiently reflected in the field of human rights and in the
United Nations system, which sometimes have purveyed generalizations about
identity and culture, even with good intentions. 26 Cultural rights discourse and human
rights approaches to cultural questions should not assume reified identities or lose the
pluralistic sense of being.
26. In recent years, trends in official and popular discourses have sometimes been
away from recognizing cultural mixing and mixed cultural id entities. In some
contexts, any kind of cultural diversity or plurality has been denied, and visions of a
claimed homogenous society have been imposed (A/HRC/43/50/Add.1, paras. 27, 35,
43, 89 and 96 (f)). Minority cultural expressions (and those of minorities within
minorities) may be repressed, marginalized or unfunded. 27 “Ethnic and religious
minorities may also suffer from prohibitions such as using a language or artistic style
specific to a region or a people” (A/HRC/23/34, para. 43). Mixed people may be erased.
27. One expert described a “passionate desire for homogeneity” at the governmental
level. A recent example of this was a 2020 statement by the Deputy Prime Minister
of Japan, Taro Aso, that Japan has only one ethnic group and language. 28 In February
2018, the Prime Minister of Hungary, Viktor Orbán, stated before elected officials
that “we do not want our colour … to be mixed in with others”, a statement denounced
by the former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. 29 Steve Bannon,
an advisor to former President of the United States of America, Donald Trump,
advocated the fictional idea of the United States having one national cult ure, a
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26
27
28
29
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See, e.g., Stuart Hall, “The Question of Cultural Identity,” in Modernity and its Futures:
Understanding Modern Societies, Book IV (Stuart Hall et al, eds., Polity, 1992).
See www.ids.ac.uk/opinions/stop-homogenising-us-mixing-and-matching-faith-and-beliefs-inindia-and-beyond/.
Freemuse submission.
Samuel Osbourne, “Japan’s deputy PM says country only has ‘one ethnic group’”, Independent,
14 January 2020. Available at www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/japan-deputy-pm-oneethnic-group-race-ainu-taro-aso-a9283116.html.
See www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22765&LangID=E .
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