5.2.2. Principles for
the formation of educators and guides
The training project
should also address educators and guides. One should not only
train experts on a professional level in the various areas involved in the
organization of the museum (or to verify their preparation), but more so
introduce them to the specific Church environment that characterizes it. They
should be able to place the art-historical patrimony of the Church in its
proper context in terms of its catechetical, cultual, cultural, charitable
aspects so that the availability of this patrimony may not just reduce itself to
aesthetic criteria, but may become a pastoral instrument through the universal
language of Christian art.
- Internal guides.
In particular, the museum employee in charge of guiding the public is called to
identify the characteristics of the visitor he is dealing with in order to
introduce him to appretiate the works exhibited through special itineraries,
for example, organized around specific subjects, individual objects, homogenous
groups of masterpieces.
- Internal educators.
The task of other internal employees in charge with the awareness raising of
visitors, is to create occasions to meet, exchange knowledge, compare with one
another.
- External animators.
Besides employees inside the museum structure one can plan to form external
educators who may be able to match the works on exhibit in the museum with the
territory from where they come from by offering visits primarily to these same
local communities, without leaving behind those that practice religious
tourism. The entire territory must in fact become a "pastoral
laboratory" open to all, besides a place of cultural education through its
architecture, history, documents that witness the interest of the Church in
cultural assets.
- Teachers and Church
workers. In order to consolidate the tie between cultural assets and the
pastoral plan one should therefore turn special attention towards the training
of catechists, religion teachers and other Church workers so that they may know
how to use the art-historical heritage they have at hand fruitfully by way of
many kinds of activities and initiatives.
- External guides and
tour organizers. With the aid of special financing one should be able to
intervene also on the external guides and tour organizers for whom one should
preferably lay down requisites in order to guarantee an intelligent
presentation of the art-historical patrimony of the Church. In this regard one
could require a certificate or diploma of attendance at an ecclesiastical
course for those involved in religious tourism, similar to that which is
required for religion teachers.
It is advisable that
civil authorities be informed of a similar perspective, in order to coordinate
orientation, procedures and accreditations.
The adequate training of
those who run the museums as well as those who run the tours, in
both ecclesiastical and civil environments, leads to a better collaboration in
the field of the cultural heritage of the Church. In fact it creates a mature
meeting point between individuals and institutions (experts in the various
fields, institutions aimed at the protection of cultural assets, schools of
every kind and degree, cultural and tourist centres).
|