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Pact and Banner Of Peace Through Culture
Nicholas Roerich was involved throughout his career with the problems of cultural
preservation. From an early age, when, as a teen-age amateur archeologist in the north of
Russia, he unearthed rare and beautiful ancient artifacts, he realized that the best
products of humanity's creative genius were almost always neglected, or even destroyed, by
humanity itself.
In the earliest years of twentieth century, he
traveled through the historic towns of Northern Russia, making paintings of their
crumbling walls and deteriorating architecture. He then made appeals to the Russian
government for efforts to maintain and restore these priceless links to the past.
Later it was the devastations of the first
World War and the Russian revolution that spurred his own efforts. He came to realize that
the cultural heritage of each nation is in essence a world treasure. And his idea of
cultural heritage broadened to include more than just the physical remains of earlier
culturesthe buildings and art, for examplebut also the creative activities, the
universities, the libraries, the hospitals, the concert halls and theaters. All must be
protected from the ravages of war and neglect, for without them life would be nothing but
a rude and ignorant time on earth.
It became clear to Roerich that an
international effort was required. During the nineteen-twenties, he composed a treaty with
the assistance of international legal experts. This treaty came to be known as The Roerich
Pact.
The Roerich Pact and Banner of Peace movement
grew rapidly during the early nineteen-thirties, with centers in a number of countries.
There were three international conferences, in Bruges, Belgium, in Montevideo, Uruguay,
and in Washington, D.C. The Pact itself declared the necessity for protection of the
cultural product and activity of the worldboth during war and peaceand prescribed the
method by which all sites of cultural value would be declared neutral and protected, just
as the Red Cross does with hospitals. Indeed, the Roerich Pact was often called The Red
Cross of Culture.
Just as the Red Cross is embodied in a
protective sign and banner, so does the Roerich Pact also designate a symbolthe one seen
on this pageto be displayed on a banner, The Banner of Peace. This Banner, flown at all
sites of cultural activity and historical value, would declare them neutral, independent
of combatant forces.
The Banner of Peace symbol has ancient
origins. Perhaps its earliest known example appears on Stone Age amulets: three dots,
without the enclosing circle. Roerich came across numerous later examples in various parts
of the world, and knew that it represented a deep and sophisticated understanding of
the triune nature of existence. But for the purposes of the Banner and the Pact, Roerich
described the circle as representing the totality of culture, with the three dots being
Art, Science, and Religion, three of the most embracing of human cultural activities. He
also described the circle as representing the eternity of time, encompassing the past,
present, and future. The sacred origins of the symbol, as an illustration of the trinities
fundamental to all religions, remain central to the meaning of the Pact and the Banner
today.
The Roerich Pact was first agreed to by
twenty-one nations of the Americas and signed as a treaty in the White House, in the
presence of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, on April 15, 1935, by all the members of
the Pan-American Union. It was later signed by other countries also.
The year 2005 marks the seventieth anniversary of the signing of
the Roerich Pact. The history of international treaties shows us how many of them were
relevant and applicable to the times in which they were signed, but then lapsed into irrelevance.
The Roerich Pact, however, has kept its heart and its life, and is linked to the needs of today’s
chaotic world as much as ever. In so many countries we see a deterioration of cultural values and
a disregard for the right of all cultural treasures to have their own continued existence, forever
protected and unimpeded. We see destruction of life, property, and the inheritance of the creative
genius of the nations. One can only hope that a greater awareness of the importance of humanity’s
cultural heritage will increase, rather than deteriorate. There is no greater value to a nation
than its culture.
The text of The Roerich Pact, and of
President Roosevelt's message to the United States Congress on the occasion of its
ratification, follow:
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