Current:Home > FinanceWorld War I memorials in France and Belgium are vying again to become UNESCO World Heritage sites -Aspire Money Growth
World War I memorials in France and Belgium are vying again to become UNESCO World Heritage sites
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:41:40
ZONNEBEKE, Belgium (AP) — With war ravaging Europe’s heartland again, the countless headstones, cemeteries and memorials from World War I are a timeless testimony to its cruelty. Belgium and France want them recognized as UNESCO World Heritage sites to make sure people stop and think.
They bring pause and introspection to just about everyone visiting the sites dotted along the former battle lines of the 1914-1918 Great War that killed some 10 million soldiers.
At 12, Robin Borremans is dreaming of becoming a helicopter pilot in Belgium’s elite Special Forces. At the Tyne Cot cemetery, where 12,000 Commonwealth soldiers are buried row upon row, his perspective on life and death, war and peace, is being honed.
“It makes you so very quiet when you know what happened in this war,” he said as he took a break from walking between the rows of the fallen. “It’s really terribly impressive.” He and his party planned to visit a cemetery for Germans, the erstwhile enemy, later that day.
It is because of that impact that both nations want UNESCO to include the area on its famed list of sites along with the Great Wall of China, Peru’s Machu Picchu and Greece’s Acropolis. A decision on the issue is expected to be made around Sept. 21 during UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
The area has 139 sites spanning western Belgium and northern France and has been a living history almost since the guns finally fell silent in 1918. In neighboring Ypres, “every evening — every evening — of every single day since the 1920s there has been a couple of people blowing a horn out of the Menin Gate,” where the names of 54,000 soldiers who were never found in the chaos spawned by the war are engraved on its walls, said Matthias Diependaele, heritage minister of northern Belgium’s region of Flanders.
“That is the idea of commemorating every individual lost life in that war,” he said.
But that is not necessarily enough to achieve such lofty recognition, UNESCO has already ruled. To the dismay of the two nations, it snubbed their request in 2018 with the advice of the International Council on Monuments and Sites marking its conclusions with comments like “several questions,” “lack of clarity,” “too narrow and limited” and “shortcomings.”
As well, it was long perceived that a site like the Auschwitz Birkenau German Nazi concentration camp in Poland should stand alone as witness to the horror and suffering and not be a precedent for a long list linked to wars.
That was five years ago and now, Diependaele said, “I believe and I’m counting on the fact that the ideas inside UNESCO changed and that now there is more a context of openness.” And with the 1 1/2-year-old Russian invasion of Ukraine, “the world has changed since then as well. And maybe there is a lot more understanding for the necessity of the defending of peace.”
Since the war in Ukraine started, several of the institutions linked to the memorials and cemeteries have begun initiatives to support the embattled nation.
As in World War I, casualties are also being counted in the tens of thousands, though, fortunately, the overall rate is still much smaller. The sense of loss though, remains the same.
“We get so many people coming through here and making that link with Ukraine just because it is so relevant at the moment,” said Erin Harris, a guide at Tyne Cot. “And you’re seeing the same situation happening — with these two sides fighting endlessly.”
“And you come here to a place like this and you really see, well, this is still happening,” Harris said. “And, you know, not much has changed.”
veryGood! (19)
Related
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Sydney Sweeney Shares How She and Glen Powell Really Feel About Those Romance Rumors
- Nearly 100 arrested in global child sex abuse operation launched after murder of FBI agents
- Taylor Swift announces October release of ‘1989 (Taylor’s Version)’ at Eras Tour show in Los Angeles
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- RHOBH Alum Diana Jenkins Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby With Fiancé Asher Monroe
- Getting clear prices for hospital care could get easier under a proposed rule
- Two more men turn themselves in after viral dock brawl in Montgomery, Alabama
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Louisiana race for governor intensifies, but the GOP front-runner brushes off criticism
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Maui wildfires leave wake of devastation in Hawaii. How you can donate or volunteer.
- MBA 5: Tech and the innovator's dilemma
- After decades, a tribe's vision for a new marine sanctuary could be coming true
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Ex-Las Vegas Raider Henry Ruggs sentenced to 3-plus years in prison for fatal DUI crash in Nevada
- Mississippi Supreme Court won’t remove Favre from lawsuit over misspent welfare money
- Virgin Galactic all set to fly its first tourists to the edge of space
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Connecticut man charged with assaulting law enforcement in US Capitol attack
Ring by ring, majestic banyan tree in heart of fire-scorched Lahaina chronicles 150 years of history
'Big Brother' cast member Luke Valentine removed from show after using racial slur
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Inflation got a little higher in July as prices for rent and gas spiked
Bethany Joy Lenz to Detail “Spiritual Abuse” Suffered in Cult in Upcoming Memoir
Taylor Swift announces October release of ‘1989 (Taylor’s Version)’ at Eras Tour show in Los Angeles