By Sophie Tchitchinadze and Ira Sulava
Georgia reached a moment it had long been waiting for. UNESCO officially recognised the country’s ancient wheat culture, a tradition woven through more than eight millennia of history, as part of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
For a country already celebrated as the birthplace of wine, the decision felt like a homecoming. Bread and wine, nurtured in Georgian soil for thousands of years, were finally recognised together on a global stage.
But this recognition is not just a tribute to the past. It opens a new chapter, shining a light on endemic grain varieties, farming practices passed down through generations, and the urgency of protecting biodiversity as climate pressures intensify.