Arhuaca mochila

The mochila arhuaca (English: Arhuaca knapsack), or tutu iku in Ika, is a popular Colombian artisan bag made by the Arhuaco people of the Sierra Nevada.[1] In recent years, the bags have turned into a cultural symbol for Colombian identity.

The Arhuaca mochila is a popular artisan bag in Colombia.

History

Although the whole arhuaco community is involved in production, only Wati (Arhuaco women) can weave the bags together according to custom.[2] Traditionally, the women learn to weave from an early age by watching their mothers. The first mochila they make is given to the priest for the rituals of the life cycle.

Characteristics

The colors with which the mochilas are woven are earth tones, ranging from brown and beige to black and gray. Originally they were woven with natural fibers from the Arahuaco lands, such as agave and cotton (the latter reserved for Mamos backpacks, which can not be traded). The Spanish introduced sheep's wool and currently mochilas also are made with industrial fibers.[3]

The bags usually carry indigenous drawings or representations of animals and other objects of their cosmology. Each design identifies families, some of the most important are the gamako (the frog), the symbol of fertility, the zikamu (the centipede), the aku (the rattlesnake), which symbolizes time and space, the peynu (the comb), the kutia (ribs), kaku serankua (the creator of the Sierra father), makuru (the vulture), gwirkunu (the hills and lakes), urumu (the snail), sariwuwu (the months of pregnancy), kunsamunu a'mia (the thought of women), kunsamunu cheyrua (human thought), kanzachu (tree leaf), chinuzatu (the four corners of the world), kambiru (scorpion tail or scribble), phundwas (the snowy peaks of the Sierra) and Garwa (the father of the roads).

In the town of Atanquez, the bags are most frequently made with hemp from the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountain-range.[1]

Usage

Arhuaca mochila

Arhuaco men traditionally use three bags: one called chige kwanu, to save personal belongings, another called Zizhu, to carry cocoa leaves, and the third for food storage or travel items.[4] They also used a fourth one called masi, to hold their poporo. The women carry the tutu gawa made of agave. The tutu chakeai and jina kau (white, cotton, without drawings) are marunsama backpacks or mamu (spiritual sage of the arhuaco).

When a man and woman will marry, the future wife weaves two bags, one for her and one for her husband, to symbolize the love of the couple.[2]

Starting in the 1960s, the arhuaca mochila left the geographical arhuaco, penetrated large Colombian cities (especially Santa Marta and Valledupar), and is used primarily by young people today as a way to claim their indigenous culture.

In 2006, the backpack was nominated as the Arhuaco cultural symbol of Colombia in the contest organized by the magazine Semana.

See also

References

  1. Villegas, Liliana, and Benjamin Villegas. Artefactos : Colombian Crafts from the Andes to the Amazon. 2nd edition. Bogota: Villegas Company, 2009. 109-10. Print.
  2. http://www.lamochilaarhuaca.com/2010/11/15/qui%C3%A9nes-hacen-las-mochilas-arhuacas/
  3. Jose V. Bonilla (2005). The Power of the Relic. Milat Books. pp. 162–. ISBN 978-0-9765151-0-4.
  4. Cycon, Dean. Javatrekker: Dispatches From the World of Fair Trade Coffee. 1st edition. Chelsea Green Publishing, 2007. 114-15. Print.
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