logotipo
Assig. object
embroidered panel
English Name
table chair clothes stand
Rohingya Name
tabil kum alna
Authorship

Shomjida; [Author]

Saleha Akter Urmi; [Facilitator]

Title
My favourite furniture
Collections

My favourite furniture (embroidery)

Fultola (embroidery)

Categories

Embroidery (EMB)

Functions

Decorative

Inventory no.
EMB0118
Description
Rohingya families traditionally gifted furniture sets on big life occasions such as weddings or the births of children. Skilled carpenters made the sets to order from the hardwood of local trees in Rakhine such as sheguwan (teak), hatal (jackfruit), or siam fata, or the now popular Australian akashi (acacia). A family might plant trees with the aim of one day making a falonk (bedstead) or sat kum (table and chair set) to set up their daughter in her new household once she got married. Carpenters would carve beautiful decorative details such as flowers or vines. Special pieces of furniture could be very expensive and elaborate. For this workshop, the embroidery artists drew and rendered from memory their most beloved furniture items from Myanmar. Space constraints in the camp mean that few of the refugees in Cox❜s Bazar own any items of their traditional wooden furniture today, and their practice of commissioning and gifting furniture to mark life transitions is on hold for the present time. In Myanmar, Shomsida and her family would eat meals at the tebil (table). Her children also used to study at the tebil. The alna (clothestand) was where they would hang clothes and umbrellas after coming from outside. Shamsida❜s father made all the furniture himself and gave it as gifts to his daughter when she got married.

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