GRi Arts & Culture 10 – 12 - 2001

Dolls of Japan Exhibition opens

 

 

Dolls of Japan Exhibition opens

 

Accra (Greater Accra) 10 December 2001- Mrs Gladys Asmah, Minister of Women and Children's Affairs, on Friday said Ghanaians must not allow certain cultural practices to retard the nation's progress.

 

Mrs Asmah who was speaking at the opening of a Japanese Dolls Exhibition in Accra said Ghanaians should rather learn to use culture positively for development. She said Ghana admires Japan for the way it had preserved and modernised its cultural beliefs and practices.

 

"We in Ghana have a lot to learn from Japan," she said. "We share similar belief systems, cultural norms and values such as respect for the aged, the way we greet warmly and the way we interact and accommodate people from different cultures."

 

Mrs Asmah said an exhibition "of such a unique collection of dolls" did not only represent magnificent levels of Japanese development but also reflected Japanese advancement and their contribution to the present day of dolls.

 

She noted that Ghana unlike Japan could only boast of a few people who have specialised in native doll making. The Minister said the exhibition, served both as an eye-opener for Ghana to develop its indigenous crafts and native dolls for the export market and also to cement Ghana-Japanese friendship and co-operation.

 

Mr Himorotu Nitta, Japan's Ambassador to Ghana, said the art of doll making in Japan had passed through many changes with the idea to represent the manners and customs of children of the various eras.

 

Doll making in Japan was elevated to the status of an art long before the 20th Century and was still a highly admired art.

GRi…/

 

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