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Cultural festivals, veritable platforms to promote peace, unity

By Gregory Austin Nwakunor
17 April 2016   |   1:39 am
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has described cultural festivals as veritable platforms to promote peace and unity, especially in a country like Nigeria, which has a rich diversity.
Cultural displays from the festival

Cultural displays from the festival

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has described cultural festivals as veritable platforms to promote peace and unity, especially in a country like Nigeria, which has a rich diversity.

The minister made the remark in Jos, Plateau State, on Friday at the 2016 Nzem Berom Festival with the theme, A Cultural Brand for Unity, Peace and Progress.

He commended the state government and the Gbong Gwon Jos, Da Jacob Gyang Buba, for reviving the festival, which has not been held in the past eight years, saying it is a strong message that peace has returned to Plateau State.

“The resuscitation of the festival, which heralds the rains and a bumper harvest, is a very powerful message to the world that peace is back to the Plateau, which remains a foremost home of Culture and Tourism. Culture, of which festival is a subset, is a strong instrument of unity, especially in a country with such a rich diversity as ours. When you understand a people’s culture, you respect them more, thus reducing the areas of friction.

“I have no doubt that with the good works of the state government, the wisdom of His Royal Majesty and the commitment to peace by all the good people of Plateau, peace and tranquility will be sustained in this beautiful land,” Mohammed said.

He expressed delight that the festival came at a time when the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, in collaborating with the British Council and the Tony Elumelu Foundation, is mapping all the creative arts and the various cultural festivals across the country, with the aim of bringing culture from the margins to the mainstream and creating a huge economy out of it.

“Under the collaboration, there will be training for all festival managers and creative artists to put them in better stead to raise the profile of their festivals and arts, as well as to turn the various festivals and the creative arts into magnet for tourists and veritable sources of job creation,’’ he noted.

Mohammed restated the commitment of the Federal Government to diversifying the economy with culture and tourism identified as two of the sectors that will form the core of the diversification process.

He said in its resolve to promote culture and tourism, the Federal Government will be holding a National Summit on Culture and Tourism in Abuja from April 27 to 29 to bring stakeholders together to deliberate on how the two sectors can effectively become money spinners for the country.

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