Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 7

Material traces of the past are not the only object of a memorial policy rooted in democratic referents. Evidently, wars have created a great many spaces that can be recovered, or even restored and rebuilt, but the heritage of war has many readings and great care must be taken with regard to the way it is transmitted and represented. It is all too easy to focus exclusively on the drama and trauma of the military events and miss important aspects such as the transformational values, for example, of anti-Francoism or anti-Fascism. Many military history museums reveal a certain nostalgic narrative that can be harmful to democratic culture and the educational work that derives from it, especially with regard to the younger generations. How should we respond to the huge proliferation of military museums in China or in Iran (more than 150 on the subject in four years)? How can we design educational projects in a museum on “German tanks” in the middle of democratic Europe? What do we say when we see that more than 300,000 schoolchildren have visited the Warsaw Uprising and Resistance Museum, full of weapons and tales of war, and housing a temporary exhibition about the Polish army in the Middle East? These are difficult questions to answer. We may well have serious doubts about the capacity of these spaces to transmit universal values, and may be concerned about the political and social messages that underlie these museum narratives. All this alerts us to the problems of portrayals of war and underlines the belief that visits to places of memory require some preparation: for example, the study of memory as a process of reflection. Thus memory tourism promotes education: not just to remember and to know what happened, but also to come to terms with it and recover values ignored in more repressive, less amenable times. These issues participate in a great ritual necessary for social peace in which individual consciences join together with collective ones. Once the policy and its objectives have been established, the next step is the recovery of memory, a task that we have carried out on many occasions at the Observatory: through inventories of sites of memory, texts, signage, management plans for potential sites and itineraries to create new projects. This procedure allows us to choose specific objectives to be pursued as the basis for the transmission of memory, and thus avoid the risk of banalization due to errors of content, or the frivolous attitudes of uninformed visitors. The study of memory is a process in which conclusions drawn from comparisons and theoretical cases can help us to learn from history and the transmission of memory, and apply new formulas in which the general public are keen to engage. This is one of the many aims of the Observatory: to address the subject and all its intricacies, without inhibitions EDITORIAL or reservations and free of any political pressure. We Jordi Guixé hope you enjoy our website and our review Observing Director of the European Memories. Happy (and critical) reading! Observatory on Memories 5