In 2019, the African Union Heads of State and Government designated 7
th of July of each year as "the African Integration Day" to celebrate major achievements attained in regional and continental integration process, and also, to deliberate on critical lessons learned, with a view of addressing challenges faced.
Africa’s Women’s Day 2021 will be celebrated under the theme, “African Women in Arts, Culture and Heritage”.
Arts and culture are two sides of the same coin. The former constitutes the artistic and collective production reflecting cultural reality of a society whereas the latter moors the society and constitutes the basis on which social and heritage capital is formed. Together arts and culture are part and parcel of a heritage of a country – though culture may be in turn be regarded as depository and vehicle of heritage.
The African Union (AU recognises the role arts, culture and heritage can play as catalysts for the socio-economic development and integration of the African continent through the Creative Industries and in addition to the 2021 Theme of the Year being dedicated to the sector, the AU has included culture in all major development blue prints, such as the Lagos Plan of Action 1980-2000 and the African Union Agenda 2063; as well as adopting various legal instruments pertaining to culture including the Cultural Charter for Africa (1978) the Charter for African Cultural Renaissance (2006), the Statute of the African Audio-Visual and Cinema Commission (2019) and the AU Model Law on the Protection of Cultural Property and Heritage (2018).
The 2021 theme draws inspiration in the African Union Agenda 2063, Aspiration 05 which envisages:
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An Africa with a Strong Cultural Identity, Values and Ethics;
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Strengthening the African cultural identity, values and ethics as a critical factor for Africa’s emergence on the global stage.
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African people imbued with a sense of their fundamental cultural unity, a sense of a common destiny and African identity and Pan-African consciousness.
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An Africa where work is a key ethic and value, where women play an important role, and in which traditional and religious leaders, including the youth as drivers of change is recognized.
All cultural and creative industries including: visual arts, cinema and audio visual, music, literature, African gastronomy and cuisine; arts and crafts, fashion and design will be given greater visibility in line with the theme of the year.
Join the online discussions and activities using the hashtags #AfricasWomensDay and #AfricanHeritage