Festival dedicated to Chakan held in Tajik capital last weekend

Asia-Plus

A festival dedicated to Chakan, an embroidery art in Tajikistan, has been held in Dushanbe.

The festival, dubbed  Sad Rangi Chakan (Hundred Paints of Chakan), took place last weekend in all districts of Dushanbe.

The event was organized by the Dushanbe Administration for the purpose of propagating national dress, reviving and developing the national embroidery art.

Craftswomen from all Dushanbe’s districts participated in the festival, putting on display various national dress, suzane (a type of embroidered and decorative textile made), skullcaps featuring Chakan embroidery, bags and other embroideries. 

Recall, Chakan was inscribed on the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity last year.

The art of Chakan embroidery is the practice of sewing ornaments, images of flowers and symbolic drawings with colorful threads on cotton or silk fabrics.  The tradition is widespread among women and girls in southern Tajikistan.  Chakan embroidery is used to decorate clothing and household items such as women’s shirts, headscarves, curtains, pillows, bedspreads and coverlets for cradles.  The embroidery features symbolic depictions and mythological images relating to the surrounding nature and cosmos, which express people’s wishes and hopes.  The practice involves selecting the textile and threads, drawing ornaments, creating needlepoint images and sewing clothes.

In the past, the threads were prepared from cotton and silk fibers and colored with natural paints made with plants and minerals: nowadays, Chakan dressmakers use fabric threads for needlework.  In the Khatlon province, the Chakan shirt is an important bridal dress.  Grooms wear a ‘toqi’ (the national skullcap featuring Chakan embroidery), and Tajik women and girls wear the Chakan dress during traditional festivals and holidays.  The embroidered products are an expression of beauty, elegance and the unity of humans and nature.  The young generation learn the art from their mothers, grandmothers and older sisters, and transmission also occurs in groups through the so-called ‘ustod-shogird’ (master-student) method.  Individual craftswomen sell their products in bazaars and through dress shops, providing an important way of earning.

Article translations:

Related Articles

spot_imgspot_img

Most Read

Join us on social media!

Реклама на asia +spot_imgspot_img

Recent Articles

Navruz, Wrestling, and Cars: How the Pahlavon from Rogun Conquered the Gushtingiri Tournament in Dushanbe

Subkhiddin Khalilzoda won the final of the gushingiri in Dushanbe and became the hero of the spring holiday.

Navrouz greetings

Dear readers and subscribers! Asia-Plus News Agency congratulates you...

Eid al-Fitr greetings

Dear readers and subscribers, Eid Mubarak! May this blessed...

Russian ruble weakens against the Tajik national currency and major global currencies

In recent weeks, the Russian ruble has experienced a...

Over 2,500 participants expected at Water Conference in Dushanbe

The Fourth High-Level International Conference on the International Decade...

BARQ becomes new IT Park Dushanbe resident, launches power bank rental service

A common problem for many city dwellers: a dead...

Some bazaars and shopping centers in Dushanbe to close for up to four days during Navrouz celebrations

During the Navrouz holiday celebrations, some bazaars and shopping...

Eurasian Development Bank Predicts 8.1% Economic Growth for Tajikistan in 2026

Analysts from the Eurasian Development Bank (EDB) forecast a...

Iran’s intelligence minister killed in air strike

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian confirmed the death of intelligence...

Russian parliament tightens immigration rules for migrant children and patent holders

On March 18, the State Duma (Russia’s lower chamber...