When Tamang women gather for a cultural event in Canada, something remarkable happens. The Chuba — the traditional Tamang dress of woven fabric in rich earth tones, adorned with coral and turquoise jewellery — fills a community hall in Brampton with the colour of the Himalayas. In that moment, geography collapses.
The Chuba is more than fabric. Its weave patterns carry regional identity — a trained eye can read which district of Nepal a family comes from in the geometry of the cloth. The coral necklaces worn by married women trace trade routes that are centuries old. The silver Jantar amulet box holds prayers that have been passed from mother to daughter across generations.
Preserving the Craft in Canada
Several Society members who are skilled weavers and jewellers have begun teaching traditional craft techniques to younger generations. Monthly workshops at a member’s home in Brampton have become a warm, intergenerational gathering — elders sharing skills, youth arriving with questions and phone cameras, everyone leaving with something made by hand.
“When my daughter wears the Chuba I sewed for her first Losar here in Canada, I see my mother in her,” said one workshop facilitator. “That is why we do this. So the line does not break.”
The Society is documenting these craft traditions as part of a broader cultural preservation initiative. If you have traditional knowledge, skills, or artefacts you would like to contribute, please get in touch.
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