The Prague Post - Libya traditional jewellery hangs on by silver thread

EUR -
AED 4.165017
AFN 81.645098
ALL 97.576574
AMD 441.62961
ANG 2.043714
AOA 1038.133939
ARS 1355.057028
AUD 1.747843
AWG 2.041117
AZN 1.925819
BAM 1.95774
BBD 2.289129
BDT 137.746527
BGN 1.955613
BHD 0.427479
BIF 3325.319855
BMD 1.133954
BND 1.462407
BOB 7.863036
BRL 6.479863
BSD 1.133754
BTN 95.637743
BWP 15.373712
BYN 3.710325
BYR 22225.49673
BZD 2.277428
CAD 1.56425
CDF 3255.582069
CHF 0.936198
CLF 0.027748
CLP 1064.827795
CNY 8.183802
CNH 8.188548
COP 4878.961453
CRC 573.58368
CUC 1.133954
CUP 30.049779
CVE 110.41879
CZK 24.949823
DJF 201.525703
DKK 7.46132
DOP 66.732881
DZD 150.122409
EGP 57.460859
ERN 17.009309
ETB 149.625437
FJD 2.554006
FKP 0.85376
GBP 0.849787
GEL 3.112682
GGP 0.85376
GHS 15.336662
GIP 0.85376
GMD 80.510341
GNF 9814.934492
GTQ 8.727997
GYD 237.202424
HKD 8.792083
HNL 29.370082
HRK 7.534442
HTG 148.182751
HUF 404.620275
IDR 18741.990303
ILS 4.097145
IMP 0.85376
INR 95.979504
IQD 1485.479628
IRR 47753.635579
ISK 146.699693
JEP 0.85376
JMD 179.655194
JOD 0.804204
JPY 162.323207
KES 146.855318
KGS 99.164134
KHR 4556.227094
KMF 491.567378
KPW 1020.539049
KRW 1583.674357
KWD 0.347648
KYD 0.944866
KZT 583.373643
LAK 24516.083494
LBP 101545.573227
LKR 339.560029
LRD 226.393694
LSL 20.634432
LTL 3.348271
LVL 0.685917
LYD 6.210402
MAD 10.474297
MDL 19.426854
MGA 5034.755746
MKD 61.49918
MMK 2380.92872
MNT 4053.767386
MOP 9.049849
MRU 44.862465
MUR 51.34513
MVR 17.473856
MWK 1968.544075
MXN 22.305043
MYR 4.806266
MZN 72.456484
NAD 20.632111
NGN 1821.798774
NIO 41.672978
NOK 11.68433
NPR 153.019713
NZD 1.89025
OMR 0.436544
PAB 1.133759
PEN 4.155283
PGK 4.612641
PHP 62.734872
PKR 318.929162
PLN 4.276957
PYG 9076.996636
QAR 4.128746
RON 5.08771
RSD 116.962853
RUB 92.416204
RWF 1609.945384
SAR 4.253202
SBD 9.477392
SCR 16.13666
SDG 680.93828
SEK 10.881943
SGD 1.465307
SHP 0.89111
SLE 25.774864
SLL 23778.428203
SOS 648.050586
SRD 41.78622
STD 23470.556592
SVC 9.919832
SYP 14743.613872
SZL 20.632256
THB 37.19539
TJS 11.762722
TMT 3.968839
TND 3.401406
TOP 2.65583
TRY 43.818584
TTD 7.683853
TWD 34.264121
TZS 3058.84117
UAH 46.974459
UGX 4147.110395
USD 1.133954
UYU 47.557976
UZS 14679.032763
VES 100.482412
VND 29429.50595
VUV 136.872414
WST 3.13682
XAF 656.633879
XAG 0.034313
XAU 0.000334
XCD 3.064567
XDR 0.818329
XOF 653.157553
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.253727
ZAR 20.67139
ZMK 10206.955952
ZMW 30.640315
ZWL 365.132698
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.06

    +0.18%

  • RBGPF

    65.8600

    65.86

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.1000

    9.87

    -1.01%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    72.3

    +0.64%

  • BP

    -0.7800

    28.4

    -2.75%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.31

    +0.22%

  • RIO

    0.2300

    59.8

    +0.38%

  • GSK

    -1.3500

    37.5

    -3.6%

  • BTI

    0.8100

    44.56

    +1.82%

  • AZN

    -1.8300

    70.26

    -2.6%

  • RELX

    -0.1100

    54.93

    -0.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    10.43

    +0.38%

  • BCC

    -4.9900

    87.48

    -5.7%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.05

    0%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    21.59

    +0.93%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    9.67

    +0.72%

Libya traditional jewellery hangs on by silver thread
Libya traditional jewellery hangs on by silver thread / Photo: Mahmud Turkia - AFP

Libya traditional jewellery hangs on by silver thread

In Tripoli's Old City, young Libyans weave delicate patterns with threads of silver and gold to create traditional filigree jewellery -- reviving an art almost lost through decades of dictatorship and war.

Text size:

Abdelmajid Zeglam is just 12 years old, but his minutely detailed creations are already selling fast in the streets around a Roman-era archway dedicated to emperor Marcus Aurelius.

"I hesitated at first for fear of failing because I'm young, but my mum encouraged me," Zeglam said.

He is the youngest of 20 or so students, around half of them female, studying at the Libyan Academy for Traditional Gold and Silver Crafts, in a building that once served as a French consulate to the Ottoman Empire.

Trainees learn about precious metal alloys before studying the art of filigree, in which beads and threads of the precious materials are woven into intricate designs then soldered together to create jewellery.

"I love it," Zeglam said. "I want to become a petroleum engineer in the mornings and a jeweller in the afternoons."

Mohamed al-Miloudi, a 22-year-old civil engineering student in a baseball cap, said he had not missed a class since signing up in September.

"It's a hobby, but I'd like to make it into my trade," he said.

The institute's founder, Abdelnasser Aboughress, said filigree jewellery was an ancient tradition in the North African country.

"Craftsmen in the medina of Tripoli were trained by Jewish masters and later by Arabs, at the prestigious School of Arts and Trades" founded in the late 19th century, he said.

- Secret jewellers -

But generations of tradition were abruptly halted after Moamer Kadhafi took power in a 1969 coup.

The capricious ruler scrapped the constitution and established his "jamahiriya" -- a medley of socialism, Arab nationalism and tribal patronage.

He also scrapped the private sector, seizing companies and confiscating their assets.

Overnight, self-employed artisans lost everything: their workshops, their livelihoods and their students.

"The state reduced Libyan crafts to nothing and forced a generation of young apprentices, who should have taken up the baton, to instead leave the traditional crafts and join the army" or become civil servants, said Aboughress.

The 55-year-old was born just a few streets away in the medina, and despite Kadhafi's ban, he took up the craft at the age of 15.

Along with his father, for decades he worked in secret on jewellery for trusted clients.

Now, he hopes to pass the craft on to younger generations, as well as fighting back against a tide of "lower-quality jewellery imported from Egypt and China (which) has flooded the market".

Aboughress is working on a project to document and preserve as much of this cultural heritage as possible.

- 'People with passion' -

Student Fatima Boussoua hit out at the practice of selling old Libyan silver jewellery at cheap prices to be exported then melted down.

"It's part of Libya's artisanal heritage that's disappearing!" she said.

A dentist in her 40s who also teaches at the University of Tripoli, Boussoua has been training at the centre for the past year, hoping to master the craft.

"We should be training artists to preserve our heritage," she said. "All it needs is people with passion."

While becoming a true expert takes years of training, Aboughress's students are already producing works for sale online or at the centre itself.

That said, he admits the project needs financial help to buy the expensive raw materials -- as well as "moral support".

He hopes that with enough resources, he will one day be able to set up a string of other workshops across Libya.

"It's time to bring this craft back to life," he said.

Q.Fiala--TPP