Two-day capacity building workshop for Kalash tour guides was arranged by District Administration through the support of Ministry of Culture Federal Government of Pakistan was implemented by CAMAT [Chitral Association for Mountain Area Tourism]. The purpose of the workshop was to improve the service quality of the guides in view of the fact that many national and international tourists come to the valleys who are less likely to be provided with information showcasing the true aspects of the indigenous Kalash culture. This is because of lack of capacity on the part of the local guides. The workshop was attended by 37 guides from Birir, Bumborate and Rumbor was conducted in participatory method through group works, using of flash cards aside from open discussion by the forum. Mr Dawood Khan, the experienced Kalash guides was the key facilitator in the workshop. The workshop put forward the recommendations as follows: 1. The true aspect of Kalash culture as tourism products has never been highlighted till now. Everyone has his/her own interpretation. It is therefore uniform information mostly derived from the local guides has to be provided to tourists. This will help generate unified knowledge about Kalash culture both at national and...
ECOCLUB Blogs™
A cartoon by leading greek political cartoonist Yiannis Ioannou, alluding to the latest austerity package introduced by the newly-elected "socialist" government, who before the elections promised green development and social spending, at the request of the guardians of the Euro and to the joy of speculators. Green as in putting green? There is also fear that the government may use the current crisis as an excuse to rush through tourism mega-projects involving holiday homes and golf communities, vigorously opposed by social movements.
CAMAT’s new Board of Directors was elected on March 9, 2010 at Mountain Inn, Chitral, where the Board members cast their vote in favor of the candidates as follows: Chairman: Sikander ul MulkVice Chairman: Dr Inayatullah FaiziGeneral Secretary: IsraruddinFinance Secretary: Meherban KhanPress Sectetary: Taj Muhammad Figr After the election, Prince Sikander ul Mulk, the newly elected chairman thanked the members for reposing trust in the new honorary set up. He also emphasized on the need to further strengthen CAMAT’s cause of protection of Chitral’s indigenous cultures and to highlight it worldwide. He added that the traditional cultures of Chitral with its festivals besides free style polo are remarkable tourism products. The peace of Chitral is intertwined with the rich cultural heritage of the region which needs to be protected at all cost. The meeting also took decision to organize Jashan-e-Qaqlasht 2010, the spring festival of the people of northern Chitral, in the second week of April.
High up in the Hindu Kush Mountains, CAMAT is working for the promotion of culture-rooted and environmentally-friendly tourism. It is a not-for-profit company working for poverty reduction in the field of tourism-- a relatively new sector of community development. Tourism is a potential sector likely to provide off-farm job opportunities for the indigenous communities—Kalash, Kho and Wakhi—in the mountains of northern Pakistan. This is desperately needed as the ever growing population is causing major natural resource depletion, which results in the degradation of natural biodiversity. Areas of Intervention: 1. Protection of Natural Environment 2. Protection of Indigenous Culture 3. Capacity Building 4. Networking Building 5. Advocacy 6. Publicity and Promotion CAMAT is thankful to ECOCLUB International for the great support to promote the cause of tourism in northern Pakistan and Chitral in particular! Thank you ECOCLUB! Please visit the following website link to know more:http://www.grassrootsjourneys.com/explore/asia/pakistan/camat/
To protect the culture and natural environment of the indigenous Kalash community, please follow the code of ethics as under: 1) Before you visit the Kalash educate yourself about local customs and culture2) The Kalash are friendly, hospitable and gentle. Unlike other villages in Pakistan, the womenfolk in the Kalash valley are more visible. Their traditional values must be respected by visitors.3) Do not gawk at the Kalash at the Kalash, consider how you feel when you are stared at during your travel.4) Always ask permission before photographing people. Do not pay to take photographs.5) Do not disturb the Kalash working in fields or in the privacy of the Bashali [the women house of seclusion].6) Do not walk into houses and temples or participate in dances or festivals without being invited.7) Buying local products benefits the local economy, but buying antiques and artifacts robs the local culture.8) All meadows are preserved for animal fodder. Avoid trampling them, and do not camp without permission. Avoid parking vehicles in fields.9) Do not use streams for washing or cleaning. Keep all pollutants, even biodegradable ones, away from streams. Use toilets whenever available. Where do not available, stay at least 30 meters from streams.10) Do...
Crete's Culinary Sanctuaries was noted for best practices by the Association of Greek Tourist Enterprises (SETE) in their presentation on marketing gastronomy tourism. I haven't found info about plans to protect cultural-culinary heritage and support the people that actually provide these experiences (or would like to if they earned a good living) -- our farmers, fishers, chefs, rural lodgers, et al. I will keep looking.http://www.sete.gr/default.php?pname=NewsA...s&show=164&la=1
There is no doubt that 2009 was a tough year for the travel industry. Consumers negotiated every purchase like a kid lobbying for an advance on their allowance. Operators have watched their competitors slash prices with the enthusiasm of pine bettles facing a fresh stand of forest. Companies have cut corporate budgets, culling travel businesses in their wake as luxury markets evaporate. So what will 2010 look like? I've shared a few predictions in my latest newsletter and we've asked you to weigh in.I'm pretty sure 2010 will continue to be tough, especially at airport security as staff take liberties usually reserved for dating couples. I think tourism businesses will find some of their best opportunities in regional driving-distance markets and by offering value packages.To help you weather the next year, I've made a New Year's resolution to offer small businesses any support I can. This will mean sharing even more examples of innovative strategies from other businesses facing the same shark-infested waters. Kalahari Management will also be offering FREE advertising space to three businesses in each of our summer and fall issues. For more details check out the newsletter at http://www.kalahari-online.com/spring2010.pdf.This is one way I can help during what we...
The Kalash Cultural Troupe participated in Sarhad Cultural Festival organised at Lok Virsa, Shakarparian, Islamabad. The event, which was participated by large number of artists and artisan from the entire North West Frontier Province was sponsored by Sarhad Tourism Corporation through the faciliation of CAMAT [Chitral Association for Mountain Area Tourism] continued from January 28 to 30, 2010.
A very interesting article by Martin Lukacs on the attempt of Vancouver Winter Olympiad organisers to choreograph a multiculturally blissful image to the world, while the actual state of indigenous peoples tells a different story:http://www.counterpunch.org/luckas02172010.html QUOTE The evidence is hard to dispute. Roads into most Indigenous reservations, some close to the celebrated Olympic slopes, are dirt. Nearly a hundred communities are on boil alerts, their tap-water undrinkable, this in the country with the world's most fresh water. There is no government strategy to deal with the toxic mold that creeps up walls of cheaply constructed houses; even by the government's own estimates, half require renovation. Aboriginals comprise 4 per cent of the Canadian population, and almost 20 per cent of the inmates of the country's prisons. One of the acknowledged suicide capitals of the world? A small reservation in northern Ontario, where a group of girls once signed a collective suicide pact. And as I write, I am recovering from a debilitating case of the mumps, a viral souvenir from a recent visit to a Quebec community seized by an outbreak. The mumps have been practically eradicated in developed countries. Not so in the third-world pockets that exist throughout Canada.
In a recent electronic discussion, provoked by a student researching "customer satisfaction" in Universities, Professor Jim Macbeth, objected arguing that: QUOTEThe fitness centre is an apt analogy for a university, better than a supermarket or a factory. The fitness centre provides facilities, assessment, counselling and coaching. It invites you to put in considerable effort for your own improvement; you can’t blame the fitness centre if you don’t work hard enough to get fit. The centre does not sell you fitness. Likewise, a university does not sell you learning. It provides libraries, resources, counselling, lectures, tutors, assessment and a program of study. You make choices; you make commitments; you do the learning. I agree with the Professor's viewpoint and objections, however there is a key difference between a fitness centre and a university (although, caveat lector, it is some time since I last visited either).The latter offers a degree, certifying in a way that the student has been taught and more or less learned something, and then s/he uses that certificate/guarantee to find employment.Beyond a handful of reputable institutions, it is sad to see quite a few schools, especially private ones, being reduced to fitness centres, or even supermarkets and factories (or...