Pathways to Heritage is a pilot project in community based participatory research. The project addresses the places and practices of significance of those who live in a rural village in Cyprus. Participatory techniques (photovoice, participatory mapping, video, storypaths) and interviews were used in order to engage participants in the practice and process of heritage making. Making heritage places and practices visible through exhibitions and presentations created individual and collective pride.
Dissemination of the project has taken place on the academic and village level. An online ArcGIS Story Map in Greek and English ‘Telling the Story of Home’ includes places and practices of importance to the people of Nikitari. The ‘Pathways to Heritage’ YouTube Channel allows free access to project videos (cc English).
Results
1. Pilot Project in Community-based Participatory Research
CBPR experience for future research; field manual
PATH is a pilot project in community based participatory research that focused on the heritage places and practices of importance to a rural community (Nikitari) in Cyprus. Engaging the multiple communities within Nikitari required maintaining relationships of trust and listening to community needs. While all villages and communities are different, the experience of setting up the project: meeting with key knowledge holders and interested parties to refine the focus of the project, consulting with interested parties about the types of participatory techniques they might use, and identifying the overlapping and often conflicting needs and wants of its communities, gave me experience necessary to undertake future community based research in Cyprus and abroad.
2. New view of heritage
ArcGIS Story Map (English/Greek); ‘Pathways to Heritage’ YouTube; article
PATH created a new way of doing research in Cyprus that crosses the boundaries between what is considered ‘archaeological’, ‘ethnographic’ and ‘folk art’. Dissemination of research results in public fora to archaeologists and anthropologists, has heightened awareness that working with rural communities leads to a more fulsome and ethically sound understanding of the past.
3. Pride and empowerment through making heritage visible
Two articles (one in an advanced stage, one co-authored with heritage leader in preparation)
Through PATH I learned the importance of participants sharing their heritage places and practices with each other. The process of sharing photographs and watching project videos together created a bond and camaraderie among participants that continues as part of the legacy of the project. For the Nikitari Youth Group, Women’s Group and Asinou Regional Primary School this experience of sharing was empowering and led to village-based initiatives.
4. Articulation of Local heritage, National and European Heritage Narratives
Article; new heritage project
The relationship among local, national and European heritage narratives was explored through informal discussions with Cypriot and international academics and collaborations with the Department of Forests and the Asinou Regional Primary School. Results from collaborative work with the primary school have been disseminated by pupils nationally (two presentations in the capital city of Nicosia) and on a European level through EU Erasmus program.