One of the many projects fueled by Mahabir Pun’s imagination is the paper-making project launched ten years ago. Given this was an ancient skill lost to time some people thought it too great a challenge. Now a successful enterprise in Nangi and Salzar villages the project employs twelve women using local Lokta shrubs to make handmade paper products. But it was a long road to success and Mahabir gives credit to Chitra Pun, who you met in the November 5th, 2012 blog entry. Chitra was first trained in paper-making techniques in Kathmandu in 2002 and started the project by returning to Nangi and training five women in 2003.
Sitting down with Chitra last October in the lodge at Mohare Danda we spent the afternoon talking about the history of the Nangi paper-making project…a mushy business.
Chitra started by telling me about anscestreal paper-making in the higher elevations of Myagdi District. He said his grandparents’ generation made paper from Lokta shrubs. They made paper while living in the forests and tending cattle. They made it due to necessity. It was hard work because the shrubs had to be cut at high elevations and carried down, the bark smells awful and stripping the bark makes the hands feel like they have been scalded…hardly the makings of a family tradition. Chitra’s mother remembers seeing them make the paper but her generation stopped because they began to move to the cities and beyond for employment. It was no longer a necessity.
There was no written history of paper-making but Chitra asked his grandmother and she explained their process. Lokta shrubs grow best above 2500 meters (9000 feet) so they would spend days cutting and carrying to lower elevations to process. The outer bark was peeled away and the inner bark chopped and boiled. The resulting pulp was mixed with firewood ashes and water, then stirred in a large wooden pond located in the forest. This mash was rinsed and spread on cotton cloth to dry in the sun. The paper was sold in Pokhara and the monies used for village needs, as this was a community project.
It has come full circle with the resurgence in natural paper-making driven initially by Japanese markets. Join me next week for more stories about papermaking…it’s no Pulp Fiction, but it’s interesting. Former volunteers, if you have volunteered in Nangi with the paper-making project tell us about your experience.
Cousin,
That Nepali paper is absolutely beautiful. It looks and feels more like fabric than paper. Thanks for letting me know what the paper makers go through to produce it.
Love,
Lynn