| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Goldman
Fund Awards Major Grant to Global Heritage Fund
Project Aiming to Help Save the Cradle of Maya Civilization
Innovative Approach Links Archaeology
and Conservation and Community-based Economic Development
to protect 525,000 Acres of Unique Tropical Biosphere
and Wildlife Habitat in the Maya Biosphere
September 1st, 2003, Palo Alto, California
– The Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund announced
today it would award Global Heritage Fund (GHF) and
the Foundation for Anthropological Research and Environmental
Studies (FARES) a generous catalyst grant of $315,000
to support a breakthrough approach to large-scale
environmental protection. Linking archaeological preservation
with conservation and economic development, the GHF/FARES
project seeks to create an ecologically sustainable
and economically viable preserve in the Mirador Basin,
the heart of Central America's last major rainforest
and home to the largest concentration of religious
and civic buildings in the ancient Maya World.
"This novel approach is our best
hope to protect one of the last remaining rainforests
for the future, and preserve one of the world's extraordinary
civilizations from the past," said Richard Gamble,
Executive Director of the Goldman Fund. "Our
foundation is thrilled to make the first major contribution.
We think this project is an innovative, realistic
and wise investment."
In the last decade, logging, slash and
burn agriculture, poaching and uncontrolled settlement
in the wake of Guatemala's civil war has left intact
only 36% of the Maya Biosphere Reserve where the Mirador
Basin is located. Containing the largest contiguous
area of roadless wilderness, the Basin's 600,000 acres
of forest, pristine river, lakes swamps and flooding
savannahs are home to over 40 threatened wildlife
species, 200 native and migratory birds, 300 species
of trees and 2,000 different flora. It is one of the
largest jaguar habitats in the world.
The Basin is also home to what is believed
to be the Cradle of Maya Civilization, where the largest
Mayan city and the two largest pyramids in the Americas
are located.
Recognizing that ecological and archaeological
devastation is swift, permanent and irreversible,
GHF and FARES are working in partnership with the
Guatemalan government and private and community groups
to gain permanent protection for the Mirador Basin,
while at the same time igniting a major new economic
force for Guatemala, of the same scale as Tikal National
Park, which today generates over $200 million in tourism
revenues for this impoverished country.
The Goldman grant will establish the
first-ever professional Park Service, an 84-person
team of park rangers and visitor services personnel
for law enforcement, administration, nature, wildlife
and archaeological conservation.
Designed to become both economically
and environmentally viable, the project will provide
jobs for the indigenous neighbor communities of the
Basin. In the first year, local community members
will participate in both on-the-job and classroom
training, while working with trained professionals
from Tikal National Park and the U.S. Department of the Interior.
In addition, there are plans for two Park and Visitor
Centers inside the Mirador Basin.
The Mirador Basin Park Service is a
joint program with the Guatemalan government, Tikal
National Park and FARES. New funding will support
travel expenses for eight U.S. Department of the Interior directors
and program leaders. U.S. Department of the Interior International
Programs under the Department of the Interior is providing
personnel for approved programs. “We expect
Mirador Basin to generate over 1,200 new jobs for
the people of the Peten, Guatemala in the next five
years, a major boost for the local economy which is
today based solely on logging, looting, poaching of
wildlife and subsistence agriculture,” said
Jeff Morgan, Executive Director of Global Heritage
Fund, “while at the same time saving forever
some of the most important biosphere, wildlife habitat
and archaeological sites of the Maya world.”
The Mirador Basin project is the subject
of several documentaries (National Geographic Channel,
Discovery Channel, 60 Minutes, ABC 20/20), as well
as over twenty articles in popular publications such
as National Geographic, the New York Times, Scientific
American, and others. Global Heritage Fund has established
a private-public ‘Mirador Basin Trust’
to provide an accountable and effective long-term
funding solution through revenues from visitors, private
donors, international banks and government donor agencies
to enable continued operations of the Park Services
after GHF, FARES and Goldman Fund monies are no longer
available.
About Global Heritage Fund
Global Heritage Fund’s is a non-profit, international
conservancy for preserving mankind’s most important
cultural heritage sites in developing countries. Our
timely investments, global network of experts, and
Preservation by Design methodology work together to
create a ‘cycle of success’ for Global
Heritage sites which have high potential for sustainable
preservation, tourism and economic development. See
www.globalheritagefund.org.
About Foundation for Anthropological
Research and Environmental Studies
The Foundation for Anthropological Research &
Environmental Studies (FARES) is a non-profit institution
conducting scientific research on ancient societies
and their environments for conservation, development
and education. The research project in the Mirador
Basin has invested over $3 million over the past 10
years in environmental and archaeological research
in the Mirador Basin, including excavation and conservation
of fourteen major archaeological sites, and has published
of over 180 scientific articles on archaeology and
the environment in Mirador Basin. www.miradorbasin.com.
About the Richard and
Rhoda Goldman Fund
Founded in 1951, the Richard & Rhoda Goldman Fund
is a private, charitable, family foundation that takes
risks and acts boldly to heal the world with new thinking
and results. The Fund rewards innovation and leadership,
courage and creativity in the fields of the environment,
Jewish affairs and human services. www.goldmanfund.org.
Please direct media inquiries to:
GHF Press press@globalheritagefund.org
or (650) 325 7520
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