Saving rural heritage assets in Europe
...and the third of my revived blogs connects from my CCT experience to CPREs rural focus, in an international context. We were in 2014 and the exciting early days of our new European heritage churches network 'Future Religous Heritage' when the world sometimes seemed to be our oyster...
This year FRH
Europe’s international conference is on the subject of rural historic
churches, chapels and other places of worship and their relevance to 21st
Century communities. It’s an important
time to be thinking about this because thousands of these buildings across
Europe are at risk of being lost forever.
The reasons are many: rural depopulation and changing patterns of worship
are key but the changing role of the State and Church, economic development and
a wider decline in participation in public life also play a big role. It could be that our generation is the one
which saves these amazing survivors from history, or it could be that future
generations will look back at us with sorrow as we do the Beeching generation
which lost our rural railways.
Beautiful historic churches in rural areas need to be saved
now. Not just because they are ancient,
lovely and tell our story and that of our societies, but also because they can
play an important part in the future of civil society. Rural communities have lost so much public
space, so many public buildings, that the church or its equivalent is often the
last civil society building left. Without it we are left alone in our sitting
rooms and cars, with nowhere to come together in a neutral, shared, beautiful
space. Communities in the countryside
need their rural historic churches just as much as their heritage needs them:
to survive.
There are huge opportunities for the use and conservation of
these buildings in the future. Extended
community, arts and tourism use is central, because it widens the appeal of
these great buildings to new audiences and interests. There are multifarious, sympathetic solutions
which will also protect the traditions of the buildings and their historic
fabric and – crucially – keep them open to the public. Promoting uses such as rural tourism also
brings much-needed business to the local area (the Churches Conservation
Trust has seen a doubling of visitors to its
rural churches in the last decade). We
have to present rural religious heritage in radically new ways, encouraging
people of all generations, all faiths and none to enjoy and understand it.
It’s these solutions and others which the FRH Europe
conference will explore in Halle, Germany, this October.
We are at a crossroads.
All across Europe rural historic places of worship are falling into
disrepair, closing their doors or being threatened by development. In many ways it is amazing how such ancient,
often idiosyncratic, complex and difficult to manage buildings have survived so
long: usually as a result of the love and commitment of a few in the face of
unbelievable odds. Do we want to be the
generation that let these buildings go, after hundreds and thousands of years
of history and change? Or will we be the
ones who took action to ensure the rural cultural heritage we still enjoy, will
be there for our descendants? Those few
– volunteers all - need our help now.
Comments
Post a Comment