German-Mexican cultural ties are more important than ever
March 1, 2017DW: Why are German-Mexican cultural relations so important?
Monika Grütters: There's an established tradition of economic ties between Germany and Mexico, and this is an important reason for the government to regularly reaffirm German-Mexican cultural relations.
That's also why the bilateral German-Mexican Year is now being held both in Mexico and Germany.
In Germany, for example, we've opened a great exhibition at the Martin-Gropius-Bau museum, called "The Maya - Language of Beauty."
In Mexico, German industrial and cultural highlights are on show throughout the country. That makes me happy, of course, because diplomacy, economy and politics can reach their limits in some areas where culture demonstrates its strengths: namely, in civil society and in the fundamental questions that move us as human beings.
You mentioned at a conference earlier today that relations with Mexico are becoming more important now than ever and that they'll be taking a different shape. Could you expand on this?
Trump's US presidency is putting American-Mexican relations in the international spotlight. It is therefore particularly important for countries like Germany to show their solidarity with Mexicans, and that can happen through culture, because we're all dependent on mobility, globalization and exchange.
It is very important that we show, for example, that walls divide and that cultural protectionism is not a successful approach. We are international, we are global. We know that ethnically diverse societies are successful and that's why we feel it is important to strengthen German-Mexican ties in a very demonstrative way.
During your trip, you visited a very impressive exhibition on genocide.
It is impressive to see that a city like Mexico City addresses genocide through that museum (Eds: Museo de la Memoria y Tolerancia), which was established thanks to the private initiative of two brave women. This museum is also impressive because it demonstrates, looking back at Germany's Holocaust, the most brutal model of genocide, that mass extermination is still a current issue throughout the world, unfortunately.
The exhibition raises awareness towards important and great values such as the dignity of human beings, the freedom of the individual, and the protection of minorities, for example. These are simply essential principles that are accepted by healthy societies nowadays and that should never be abandoned.
I was therefore very impressed by the way the museum dealt with genocide and with German history as a background. We will be cooperating even more closely in the future.