The Tales Behind The Pua Kumbu
Dr Welyne Jeffrey Jehom, Anthropologist & Co-founder , Rumah Gareh Pua Kumbu Community Project
16-Jan-24 15:00
Embed Podcast
You can share this podcast by copying this HTML to your clipboard and pasting into your blog or web page.
Close
Traditional textiles can tell us a lot about the people and cultural traditions behind it, and one such textile is the Pua Kumbu, which is hand-woven and designed by Iban women. However, like many other traditional knowledge and skills, it is becoming a dying art as fewer of the younger generation of Iban women pick it up. Here to share more about the Pua Kumbu and what stories textiles can tell us is Dr Welyne Jeffrey Jehom, a senior lecturer at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Universiti Malaya. She’s also the founder of the Rumah Gareh Pua Kumbu Community Project, which involves Iban women coming from or living at Rumah Gareh in Kapit, Sarawak and helps them to develop the weaving of Pua Kumbu into a cottage industry.
Image credit: Dr Welyne Jeffrey Jehom
Produced by: Lim Sue Ann
Presented by: Lim Sue Ann
This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.
Categories: History/Heritage, culture
Tags: indigenous cultures, Pua Kembu, the bigger picture, live & learn, weaving, east malaysian art, intangible cultural heritage, east malaysia, sarawak,