CAIRO — Under the steady hum of a ceiling fan, Ahmed
Othman weaves golden threads through black fabric, creating Quranic verses, a
century after his grandfather’s work adorned the
Kaaba in Mecca’s Grand Mosque.
اضافة اعلان
A ceremonial hanging of the kiswa, huge pieces of
black silk embroidered with gold patterns, over the cubic structure that is the
centerpiece of the Grand Mosque symbolizes the launch of the hajj annual
pilgrimage, which starts this week.
Othman’s family used to be honored with the task of
producing the kiswa.
His family’s creations would be dispatched in a
camel caravan to Islam’s holiest site in western
Saudi Arabia toward which
Muslims across the world turn to pray.
Now, Othman keeps the tradition alive in a small
workshop, tucked above the labyrinthine Khan Al-Khalili bazaar in central
Cairo, where mass-produced souvenirs line the alleys.
The area is historically home to Egypt’s
traditional handicrafts, but artisans face growing challenges.
Materials, mostly imported, have become expensive,
particularly as Egypt faces economic woes and a devalued currency.
Plummeting purchasing power makes high quality
hand-crafted goods inaccessible to the average
Egyptian, while master
craftspeople find it hard to hand down their skills as young people turn to
more lucrative jobs.
This wouldn’t be the case “if there was good money
in the craft”, Othman sighed, hunched over one of the many tapestries that fill
his workshop.
Sheets of black and brown felt are covered in verses
and prayers, delicately embroidered in silver and gold.
Every stitch echoes the “sacred ritual” Othman’s
grandfather was entrusted with in 1924.
“For a whole year, 10 craftsmen” would work on the
kiswa that covers the Kaaba which pilgrims circumambulate, using silver thread
in a lengthy labor of love.
Sprinkled rosewater
From the 13th century,
Egyptian artisans made the giant cloth in sections, which authorities
transported to Mecca with great ceremony.
Celebrations would mark the processions through
cities, flanked by guards and clergymen as Egyptians sprinkled rosewater from
balconies above.
Othman’s grandfather, Othman Abdelhamid, was the
last to supervise a fully Egyptian-made kiswa in 1926.
From 1927, manufacturing began to move to Mecca in
the nascent Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, which would fully take over production of
the kiswa in 1962.
The family went on to embroider military regalia for
Egyptian and foreign dignitaries, including former presidents Jamal Abdel
Nasser and Anwar Sadat.
“In addition to our work with military rank
embroideries, my father started embroidering Koranic verses on tapestries,” and
then reproducing whole sections of the kiswa.
Clients began flooding in for “exact replicas of the
kiswa, down to the last detail”.
Though today they offer small tableaus for as little
as 100 Egyptian pounds (about $5), massive customized orders go for several
thousand dollars, such as replicas of the Kaaba door, which Othman proudly
claims are indistinguishable from the originals in Mecca.
Back-breaking
But the family has not been
immune to the economic turbulence that began with the coronavirus pandemic,
which decimated small businesses and craftsmanship in Egypt.
Since early 2020, they have sold around “two pieces
per month”, whereas before they would sell at least one tapestry a day.
Othman worries that a sense of “worldwide austerity”
makes business unlikely to bounce back.
Today, there might only be a dozen or so craftsmen
whose work he considers authentic, with many artisans leaving the craft for
quicker cash flows.
“They can make 200 to 300 pounds a day,” ($10-$16)
driving a tuktuk motorized rickshaw, or a minibus, Othman said. “They are not
going to sit on a loom breaking their backs all day.”
But still, a century and a half after his great
grandfather left his native Turkey and brought the craft with him to Egypt,
Othman says he has stayed loyal to techniques learnt as a child when he would
duck out of school to watch his father work.
“It is on us to uphold the craft the same way we
learned it, so it is authentic to the legacy we inherited,” he said.
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