Seventy-year-old
granny struggles to ensure traditional Nubian handicraft known as kuta (food
cover) and tabaga are not extinct
By
Iddi Musyemi
Mwacha mila ni mtumwa, a Swahili saying
states. Mama Habiba has worked all her life to ensure that a set of important
cultural item central to the Nubian community is not discarded.
For over 50 years, the 70 years old mother,
and grandmother, has weaved traditional Nubian handicrafts known as kuta and
tabaga. These are products made from intricately woven reeds with colour
patterns.
Kuta is a cone-like item used for covering
food in the as it is served. Tabaga is a flat round tray used for winnowing
rice or beans to remove chaff.
Every Nubian housewife must have kuta in
here house, mama Habiba says.
“You cannot serve food without covering it
with kuta,” she says emphasising the importance of the cultural item. “It is
disrespectful to serve food without it.”
She has made these items since she turned
18 years, the age when girls were encouraged to take the art seriously.
Back in 1940 when she was growing up girls
were never sent to school. Their fathers did not entertain the idea of sending
children to the only missionary schools that existed at the time because they
believed it was against the teachings of Islam, a religion they were loyal to.
“When we were not out playing, our mothers
taught us housekeeping and cooking at home,” Mama Habiba takes me down the
memory lane. Boys went to either Madrassa schools or went to British colonial
military schools for vocational training.
During their games as girls they would
gather reeds thrown away by their mothers and train their hands on weaving
using thorns as needles.
Nowadays she is the only one making this
important handicraft around her home in Kibera. Most of the women of her
generation are dead and the tradition is slowly disappearing as if it is also
being buried.
“Young girls are not interested in this art
any more,” says the elderly woman. Although filled with lively laughter, her
voice is hollow with age and tiredness. She jokingly says that the girls of
this generation do not like difficult jobs.
Making kuta is a long process. Mama Habiba
buys the amount of reeds she needs from Ngong where they are grown. She also
has to buy the dyeing paint from industrial area because it is not sold in
retail.
“You wake up at dawn to boil the reeds
before you even think about putting in colours,” reveals mama Habiba. “It is a
process that takes at least two days to have the reeds readied.”
Even though she never went to school
experience has been the best teacher for the illiterate woman. “I start with
yellow during the colour adding process and I know which colours to mix to get
a different one.” There is no wastage of water during the process as everything
is done in the same pot.
The reeds are then dried after which they
are ready for weaving. It is at this point when the weaver’s patience is tried
as one has to sit down for long hours with eyes fixed on the work at hand
alone.
“You will not do anything else for the
whole day.” This is particularly so for
the kuta which by shape and colour designs poses a challenge. “If it’s an urgent order then you will be
busy for at least two weeks.”
But this is a business that pays for
itself. A set of these items can go for as much as Sh3000. The holy month of
Ramadhan is one time when mama Habiba will have a good business.
At Nubian weddings the family of the
prospective husband must send sets of kuta and tabaga laden with gifts of
flour, lessos, blankets or traditional dresses to the family of the prospective
wife.
Other people use kuta for home decorations
especially tourists who buy them as souvenirs to their friends and families.
In the old days, girls would make kutas
themselves but the art has left the new generation who have to buy the
handicrafts.
“So I can sell sets of kuta worth Sh6000 to
Sh18000 during such weddings,” says Mama Habiba adding jovially that the cost
of nikkah (Muslim wedding) includes a visit to her home for the important items
This strenuous art is becoming hard and
harder for Mama Habiba to continue with. She is losing her eye sight to her
diabetic condition. While she still expects orders and weaves more to sell
during the forthcoming Ramadhan, it is evident that she will have to stop
making soon.
Some of her children have learnt weaving
from her although they do not practice it as much as she would like. She
believes she has prepared them to take on the tradition when the inevitable
thing comes.
Tradition is something that endures even
when one generation vanishes from this world to the afterlife. Will this
culture survive when Mama Habiba dies?
“God will bring other people who can
continue the tradition,” she prophesises.
Source-The New Dawn.
Source-The New Dawn.
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