This supplement is a selected compilation of the sessions presented at the VII International Congress of the Mediterranean Diet, held in Barcelona, Spain on 11-12, March 2008. A conference that was designed to contribute to the process of preservation and promotion of the Mediterranean Diet pattern in the framework of the project towards the UNESCO recognition of the Mediterranean diet as part of Food Cultural Heritage.
The Permanent Delegates to UNESCO of Greece, Italy, Morocco and Spain presented in Paris the Nomination for the inscription of the Mediterranean Diet on the Representative List of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The Nomination, jointly prepared by four States parties, has been technically coordinated by the Mediterranean Diet Foundation (FDM in its Spanish abbreviation) a non profit organization with a strictly scientific and cultural agenda that since 1996 has been promoting the research and dissemination of the many health advantages of the Mediterranean Diet and the Mediterranean lifestyle. This Nomination is open to other Mediterranean States, to join this strong commitment to safeguard our common heritage.
In latest years the general interest in intangible cultural heritage has been constantly increasing, as the adoption of the UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) in 2003, demonstrates.
This Convention considers the ICH as “… the practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, skills –as well the instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural spaces associated therewith- that communities, groups and, in some cases, individuals recognize as part of their cultural heritage. This ICH, transmitted from generation to generation, is constantly recreated by communities and groups in response to their environment, their interaction with nature and their history, and provides them with a sense of identity and continuity, thus promoting respect for cultural diversity and human creativity…”
The four States parties presenting the Nomination and all the actors concerned consider the Mediterranean Diet as a millennium-old cultural corpus constituent element of the intangible cultural heritage as defined in Article 2 of the UNESCO Convention.
Etymologically originating from the Greek word “díata”, way of life, a harmonious relationship between mind, body and environment, the Mediterranean Diet is the ensemble of practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, skills, spaces, and associated objects that people around the Mediterranean have created, and historically recreated in interaction with nature, around food.
In several occasions, scientists from all around the world, studying the benefits that this nutritional pattern has for the population’s health, quality of life and well-being, have recognised the importance of the Mediterranean Diet as part of the Mediterranean culture and identity.
In 1996 with the patronage of the Mayor of Barcelona, the 1st International Congress on the Mediterranean Diet released the Barcelona Declaration on the Mediterranean Diet, stating objectives and goal for healthy eating and emphasizing its cultural and historical qualities. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) endorsed the Declaration giving strong impetus to educational programs throughout the Mediterranean and the rest of the world about the value of this healthy nutritional pattern.
On October 16th, 2007, on the occasion of the World Food Day, 22 scientists and experts from 9 different countries, members of the Mediterranean Diet Foundation’s Scientific Committee, signed the Mediterranean Declaration on Mediterranean Diet as intangible cultural heritage (Declaration annexed), supporting and strengthening the transnational Nomination to UNESCO, since its very beginning.
The Mediterranean Diet transcends the nutritional aspect of food and elevates it to the category of sacred, symbolic and festive, accompanying most social celebrations and religious festivals that mark annual cycles. But the real richness of the Mediterranean Diet consists in its simplicity, on the normality and the wit and imagination for combining products and flavours, obtaining the maximum performance with minimal resources and a large diversity of dishes with the same products. It constitutes one of the most universal cultural expressions of sociability and intercultural dialogue, contributing to the cooperation and respect of differences.
Recently a process of awareness-rising has been taking place, concerning the need to protect the asset that Mediterranean Diet represents for our health, sustainable development, tradition, culture… The effects of globalization and social transformations have set off the alert on the dangers that it can suffer. In this frame, its inscription as ICH will represent an important counterpoint to the processes of erosion threatening it. Its inscription will contribute to give visibility to all its associated cultural, social and symbolic content, granting them greater opportunities to express it, an it will stimulate institutional safeguarding efforts, which will lead to an increased presence and visibility of this heritage in normative texts, and protective measures and an increased legal recognition.
Since the beginning of this project, the territories, localities, associations, foundations, institutes and research centres, as well as local, regional and national governments have collaborated in the preparation of the nomination as well as in the study and implementation of documentation, dissemination and protection initiatives.
Awareness campaigns and programmes aimed at safeguarding the Mediterranean Diet have been developed: legal, technical, administrative and financial measures will be adopted; as well as scientific forums, conferences, roundtables, and other events. Scientific, technical and cultural studies will be strongly fostered. The research centres and universities will be invited to involve young researchers within this field, to start investigations and inventories. Local institutions, museums, documentation centres and cultural associations are being activated to carry out initiatives for the preparation of inventories of the element. In order to develop awareness of the Mediterranean Diet in society, educational programmes particularly addressed to young people are being studied.
In Spain, the Mediterranean Diet Foundation, in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of the Environment and Rural and Marine Affairs, several local authorities and civil society representatives, has been organising many public actions to promote the awareness rising and the participation of the populations in the protection of their culture and traditions, and created a Web page where people can endorse the Nomination and express their support to the Mediterranean Diet as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The success of these initiatives confirms once again the commitment of the populations to the Mediterranean culture and the importance of dissemination activities for the promotion and protection of the Mediterranean Diet, our intangible heritage, our way of life.
2007 BARCELONA DECLARATION ON THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET AS INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE
The Mediterranean Diet Foundation’s Scientific Committee, in its meeting, held in Barcelona, on October 16th, 2007, on the occasion of the World Food Day,
Reaffirming the 1996 Barcelona Declaration on the Mediterranean Diet that expresses both the consensus of the international scientific community on the health benefits of this diet, as well as the need to preserve its historical and cultural qualities for future generations,
Assuming its role as an independent and expert consulting body, for all those matters that require a scientific opinion, and reaffirming its intention to investigate and disseminate the values of the Mediterranean Diet and support all initiatives that contribute to its safeguarding and promotion,
Taking into account all the worldwide scientific contributions dedicated to the knowledge of the Mediterranean Diet, and reaffirming its importance for the health promotion of the population and its preventive properties against cardiovascular diseases, some types of cancer and other non communicable diseases,
Acknowledging that the traditional Mediterranean Diet has been recognized as a healthy and nutritionally balanced diet, based on a broad variety of locally produced and palatable foods,
Considering what the Mediterranean Diet represents for all Mediterranean countries’ culture and wellbeing,
Taking into account that the Mediterranean Diet promotes local production and consumption of traditional Mediterranean foods, and encourages sustainable agriculture and enables food security,
Considering the Mediterranean Diet’s contribution to intercultural dialogue, to the transfer of knowledge and technology and to the social and economic revitalization of Mediterranean communities,
Recognizing the role of the family, school, and the community in transmitting cultural values and practices surrounding food,
Considering that, despite its increasing popularity worldwide, the Mediterranean Diet is endangered in all countries of the Mediterranean region,
Recognizing that the Mediterranean Diet is an extraordinary cultural heritage, that is expressed in a diversity of food traditions, landscapes, culinary creativity, gatherings and celebrations,
Referring to the 2005 Rome Declaration, where the Mediterranean Diet was highlighted as a whole lifestyle pattern which urgently required preservation and promotion; and where it was also agreed to prepare a proposal for the inclusion of the Mediterranean Diet in the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity of the UNESCO, under the coordination of the Mediterranean Diet Foundation, in collaboration with most Mediterranean countries.
Considering the importance that surrounds the Intangible Cultural Heritage as emphasized in the UNESCO Recommendation on the Safeguarding of Traditional and Popular Culture in 1989, in the UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity in 2001 and especially in the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, approved by the UNESCO General Conference in 2003,
The Scientific Committee, on the occasion of the World Food Day 2007, issues the following
DECLARATION
1. That the Mediterranean Diet is a living heritage that is still being transmitted from generation to generation.
2. That the Mediterranean Diet is continuously recreated in response to the environment in the diverse communities of the area through their respective local shades, which surround them with a feeling of identity.
3. That the abandonment of traditional healthy habits and the emergence of new lifestyles associated with socioeconomic changes pose important threats to the preservation and transmission of the Mediterranean Diet to future generations.
4. That the Mediterranean Diet deserves and requires multiple and diverse scientific and cultural initiatives, focused on its preservation, promotion and transmission.
5. That it is unanimously agreed to give full support to the candidacy of the Mediterranean Diet to be included on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity of the UNESCO, understanding that this initiative will determine the safeguarding of the Mediterranean Diet, with its consequent benefits for the wellbeing of the population.
6. That Governments, Institutions, NGOs, Professional Associations, International Agencies and Organizations are urged to subscribe to the Declaration and to support our initiatives directed towards the UNESCO candidacy of the Mediterranean Diet.
The present declaration arises from the debates and common analysis of the scientists and experts of the Scientific Committee of the Mediterranean Diet Foundation; whose names are cited in the following list:
Lluís Serra-Majem
Mediterranean Diet Foundation, Spain
Joan Reguant
Mediterranean Diet Foundation, Spain
Francisco Sensat
Mediterranean Diet Foundation, Spain
Antonia Trichopoulou
University of Athens, Greece
Josep Antoni Tur Marí
Fòrum internacional d’investigació en cuina i nutrició a la mediterrània,
University of the Balearic Islands, Spain
Maria Daniel Vaz de Almeida
University of Porto, Portugal
Adalberta Alberti
University of Rome Torvergata, Italy
Maurizio Battino
Università Politecnica delle Marche, Italy
Sandro Dernini
EuroMediterranean Forum on Food Cultures, Italy
Flaminio Fidanza
University of Rome Torvergata, Italy
Basilios Karamanos
National University of Athens, Greece
Carlo La Vecchia
University of Milan, Italy
Claudio Maffeis
University of Verona, Italy
Suzanne Piscopo
University of Malta, Malta
Jordi Rius
Centro Médico Teknon, Spain
Lina Badimón
Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Spain
Carolina Codrington
University of Crete, Greece
Ramón Estruch
Hospital Clínico de Barcelona, Spain
Elizabeth Helsing
Board of Health, Norway
Denis Lairon
INSERM/INRA, France
Aicha Lemtouni
ILCS, Morocco
Ridha Mokni
Institut National de Nutrition & Technologie Alimentaire, Tunisia