This beautiful handmade
bowl is exported by Gone Rural, a company that empowers the women of Swaziland to
use their traditional crafting techniques to generate sustainable
incomes.
The Kingdom of Swaziland stands proudly between South Africa and
Mozambique. Smaller than Massachusetts, Swaziland’s population of one
million is comprised mainly of Swazi people, with small populations of
Zulus and white Africans interspersed.
About the pottery…
Near
Swaziland’s administrative capital city of Mbabane, a group of 20
master potters create the traditional pottery of
Swaziland—traditionally used to store beer and grain—for tourist and
export markets. Crafting each piece by hand with no wheel, one woman
can produce 160 ceramic pots in a month, earning through piecework
three times the government’s recommended wage for employed handcrafters.
The potters coil long ropes of prepared clay to form each vase, and
after smoothing and drying, rub the nearly-dry surface with a river
stone to burnish the exterior. Dried vases are then fired in an open
fire for two to three hours to attain the proper hardness and
characteristic polished black coat.
About the weaving…
The kingdom of Swaziland is also home to some of the oldest granite
mountains in the world. A wiry sedge grass grows in the cracks of
granite and is harvested by local Swazi women, who call the hardy grass
Lutindzi. Too wiry and inaccessible to be foraged by cattle, Lutindzi
has been, for centuries, plaited into rope for tying down roof
thatching. Swazi girls grow up learning the proper plaiting technique
at their mothers’ sides, and as they mature, learn to stitch the plaits
together to create exquisite floor mats and tableware.
Gone Rural
Gone Rural, a company dedicated to the creation of a grass weaving and
plaiting industry in Swaziland, lies nestled in the picturesque
Malkerns Valley. The company provides an invaluable craft export
infrastructure that allows hundreds of rural Swazi weavers and potters
to earn a good living from their craftwork. By empowering Swazi women
to generate income from readily-available, sustainable natural
materials, Gone Rural helps fuel Swaziland’s fight against poverty and
HIV/AIDS through a sensible, grassroots approach.