Future for Religious Heritage explained

Future for Religious Heritage
Formation:2011
Type:European network
Location:Brussels
Membership:170
Leader Title:President
Leader Name:Pilar Bahamonde
Region:Europe

Future for Religious Heritage (FRH) is a non-faith, not-for-profit heritage organisation registered in Belgium, with members across Europe. FRH is a member of the European Heritage Alliance 3.3, an informal European sectoral platform. The association was a stakeholder of the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018.

Purpose

"Begun as a grass-roots movement in 2009, the Future for Religious Heritage took shape in 2011 as a network of groups from more than 30 countries, dedicated to finding ways to keep churches, synagogues and other religious buildings open, if not for services, then for other uses."[1] FRH has an office in Brussels.

Members

Its members include the National Museum of Denmark, the Archbishopric of Prague, Chorus Venezia, Din l-Art Ħelwa, Museum Catharijneconvent, the Department for Cultural Heritage Conservation of the Church of Sweden, the Churches Conservation Trust, the Diocese of London, English Heritage, Friends of Friendless Churches, The Historic Religious Buildings Alliance, Jewish Heritage UK, the National Churches Trust, Scotland's Churches Trust, Culture Directorate of Government of Cantabria, among many others.[2]

Activities

FRH bring the voice of the sector to the European Institutions, while also working with its members to facilitate the development of cross border projects.

These projects aim to fully exploit the potential of religious heritage in its various aspects:

Sacred buildings, their contents and their history represent the biggest single portfolio of Europe's historic patrimony.

Religious buildings bind communities together through the worship and non-worship activities that take place within them. They are often the only public buildings remaining.

Places of worship attract visitors from afar and from nearby. Religious buildings represent five out of ten of Europe's most visited sites and make a major contribution to tourism GDP.

Their physical presence marks the cityscape or rural environment.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bohlen. Celestine. An Afterlife for Europe's Disused Places of Worship. New York Times. June 2, 2014. 2.
  2. Web site: Future for Religious Heritage. Future for Religious Heritage. en-GB. 2019-06-03.