Preserving One Resource in Two Countries
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_____Today, the El Pilar Program, under my direction, has coalesced an international, multidisciplinary team with a collaborative conservation plan to rescue the rainforest, curtail looting, and recover the cultural heritage of the Maya forest region. This plan incorporates local community wisdom, government conservation and development agenda, and international environmental concerns through an integrated archaeological research program. My anthropological background guides a model plan centered around one resource in two countries: the ancient Maya center of El Pilar. We are now in a position to bring the broad plans for El Pilar into a design for concrete action.

_____At El Pilar, rather than emphasizing the monumental, priority is given to domestic architecture-reconstructing houses, replanting gardens with traditional forest crops used by the ancient Maya, and creating a sense that people in the past actually lived there in the shadows of the public architecture. Today, the monuments of El Pilar are a shared resource. I picture El Pilar as a symbol of cooperation between Belize and Guatemala. But that is only the beginning. El Pilar also serves as a model of collaboration between the contiguous reserve and the adjacent communities who possess an emergent appreciation for their own cultural heritage and a desire to promote their own social and economic development.

 

 

Director's Vision Mainpage
Overview | Landscape | Individual’s Search | One Resource in Two Countries
The Past Informs the Future | The Forest as a Garden | Community Links
Discovering El Pilar | Taking Up the Challenge