A draft five-year program to help preserve Latvian diaspora communities and to foster repatriation to Latvia has been released for public comment
Published:
18 July 2004 y., Sunday
A draft five-year program to help preserve Latvian diaspora communities and to foster repatriation to Latvia has been released for public comment by the Minister for Special Assignments for Social Integration Affairs in Rīga. The plan foresees spending more than LVL 300,000 annually (about USD 560,000) on a variety of efforts at cultural maintenance.
"Considering that Latvians living abroad are an integral part of the Latvian nation, the diaspora nowadays has an important role of promoting Latvian culture and traditions on a world scale," states the plan, which is titled the Latvian Diaspora Support Programme. "It has great potential in creating a positive image of Latvia abroad."
A variety of activities, from funding the work of Latvian teachers, to supporting mass media in the diaspora, to providing communities with folk costumes, would be supported under the program.
The program has been in the works since December, led by a committee that includes representatives from the World Federation of Free Latvians (known in Latvian by the abbreviation PBLA), an official from the Latvian embassy in Moscow, as well as several ministry and other Latvian government officials.
Latvian organizations in the diaspora have been strong supporters of various activities in Latvia, but it has only been in the past several years that the Latvian government has begun to back cultural maintenance work abroad. A number of ministries have funded activities in the West, while the Minister for Special Assignments for Social Integration Affairs has aided Latvian communities in Siberia.
Šaltinis:
latviansonline.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Evacuees are allowed briefly back to their homes inside the Fukushima Daiichi exclusion zone to collect belongings.
more »
A Chilean base-jumper soars off a cliff in the Andes on a motorbike before opening his parachute.
more »
China's largest unmanned helicopter reports successful maiden flight.
more »
How certain was the U.S. Navy Seal team that it was Osama Bin Laden they shot, killed and buried at sea? According to a Florida company that makes biometric identification equipment, there's no doubt the Seals got their man.
more »
Emissions and noise-free, the world's first electric trash carts are hitting the streets of France, powered by Franco-American technology.
more »
U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon says he has seen no evidence that Pakistan was aware Osama bin Laden was living in a compound in the country.
more »
Conservationists hope a new sanctuary will save Australia's declining Tasmanian Devil population.
more »
The tiny microbe could be the future of sustainable energy according to researchers in the uk. The scientists are developing autonomous robots that can generate their own power, and microbial fuel cells that can turn any organic material into electricity, could be the answer.
more »
The day's top showbiz news and headlines including Arnold Schwarzenegger lines up his next film, Justin Bieber's Japan concerts in jeopardy, and Cheryl Cole to be on U.S. "X Factor."
more »
The last combat veteran to serve in the First World War dies in Australia at 110.
more »