Monday, October 11, 2010

Maldives Culture


The Maldivian culture is rich with flavors from most of the seafarers who set foot on its soil. Traditional dances and music may not be an everyday event but there are occasions where traditional music and dances are performed. Though traditional dresses are not used by present day generation there are many types of traditional dresses made for both sexes.

Like the unique geographical formation, the cultural events and ceremonials are unique according to the event that is celebrated or performed. Naming a newborn child, Bodumaloodhu (a prayer accompanied with festive meal), Eid festival and circumcision of male child are few events that take place where the taste of rich cultural 'cocktail' can be experienced. Bodu beru (big drum) performance is the best-known form of performance of traditional music and dance where females and males participate. Bandiyaa (a dance performed by woman), Thaara (dance performed by male) is among the top traditional music and dances practiced in the Maldives Islands.

Traditional food basically fish used as the main component has been influenced from the Indian subcontinent. Garudhya (tuna soup), spicy curry and rice are the stable food of most of the population. Most other dishes such as western meals like pasta are normally modified with a flavour of tuna in it when prepared for local consumption. Other meats and chicken are normally eaten in special occasions.























































Economy of Maldives, Its People, Culture & Flag

People of Maldives
The origins of the Maldivians are lost in history. Archaeological finds indicate that the islands were inhabited as early as 1500 BC, and there are tales of a legendary people called the Redin, who may have been among the earliest of explorers. It is believed that Aryan immigrants from the Indian subcontinent established permanent settlements around 500 BC. The early Maldivians were probably Buddhists or Hindus migrating from the Indian subcontinent.
Today, Maldives is perhaps the only country with a hundred percent Sunni Muslim population. Islam was introduced around AD 800, and the moderate form practiced in Maldives has remained virtually unchanged. The main tribes are Singhalese, Dravidian, Arab and African. No other religion, except Islam, is permitted. Several ancient beliefs still survive; for example, islanders fear jinn's-evil spirits that come from the sea, land and sky. These are blamed for everything that cannot be explained by religion or science. Dhivehi, an indigenous language, is spoken only in the Maldives. The script is called "Thaana." English is the main language taught at schools. Most people in Malé and tourist resorts speak English.  

Economy of Maldives
The economy is based on three principal activities: fishing, tourism and shipping. Poor soil and lack of cultivable land limit agriculture. Traditional industries consist of local boat or dhoni building, handicrafts such as mat-weaving, jewelry-making and lacquer work. Export-oriented industries include tuna fish canning and manufacture of garments. However, a severe shortage of labor in the tourism sector has resulted in the decline of most of these industries. Tourism remains the major source of foreign currency and the dominant support for the economy.

Arts, Culture and Music of Maldives
The term bodu beru means a big drum, and lends its name to the famous music and dance form of Maldives. Tourist resorts organize performances of this dance for a local culture night, and it can be quite sophisticated and gripping. There are four to six drummers in a group, and the hum has distinct African influences. Contemporary local rock bands often perform at resorts where they do credible covers of the usual old favorites. Performing for a local audience, they may incorporate elements of bodu beru in their music, with lots of percussion and extended drum solos.

Though performances of traditional music and dance are not daily events, the Dhivehi culture is strong and adaptive despite various foreign influences, ranging from Hindi movies and Oriental martial arts, to Michael Jackson and Muslim fundamentalism. Western fashions, pop music and videos are visible in the capital, but on public occasions, the celebrations always have a distinctly Maldivian touch.

Flag of Maldives
The flag of Maldives is red with a large green rectangle in the center bearing a vertical white crescent; the closed side of the crescent is on the hoist side of the flag. 



 

MALDIVES; the Divehi People

The Divehi people are also known as Maldivians or Maldive Islanders. The Maldivians call their own country ‘Divehi rājje’, meaning ‘The Island Kingdom’. The word ‘Divehi’ is derived from ‘dvīp’, the Sanskrit word for ‘island’. This ancient word for ‘island’ is also present in the word ‘dives’ of ‘Maldives’, the official name of the country in the English language. Many geographical names of islands in Maldives include that word for island in the form of ‘dū’ at the end, like Hitadū or Fōkaidū. The Divehi people live mainly in the Maldive Islands and they presently number about 300,000; although exact demographic data are not available.
For ethnographic and linguistic purposes the Divehi people can be divided into three groups:
  • The main group of Maldivians, numbering about 230,000, inhabits the numerous atolls stretching from IhavandippuỊu (Haa Alif) to Haddummati (Laamu). They constitute over 70% of the total population.
  • The southern group of Maldivians, living in the three southernmost atolls of the equatorial zone, number approximately 60,000 and constitute about 20% of the total population.
  • The people of Minicoy, numbering about 10,000, inhabit a 10km long island under Indian administration, at the northern end of the atoll chain and are only about 4% of the total amount of Divehi people.

The language spoken in the Maldives is Divehi, belonging to the group of Indo-Aryan languages, but having many affinities with the Dravidian languages of the geographical area in which the country lies. Present-day Divehi has borrowed many words from Arabic. Besides the main form of Divehi, known as Malé Bas, this language has three markedly different variants which are located in the second group, in the South. The people of the third group live in great isolation, for Minicoy is totally off-limits for Maldivians since 1957. Only Indians are allowed to travel to Minicoy. Thus, Minicoians are steadily undergoing a process of acculturation owing to lack of contact with the remaining Divehi people and pressure to use other languages (Malayalam, English and Hindi).
Climate ::
The climate of the Maldive Islands is divided into two seasons, one slightly wetter marked by the SW monsoon and the other, somewhat drier, by the NE monsoon. The winds during those seasons were formerly very important for the Maldive trading boats which used to make a yearly trading trip to the Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka. The country is flat and the islands very small, over 99% of the surface of the country is mainly deep blue waters. There are no significant geographical features that could create a micro-climate, thus all over the Maldive archipelago the climate is oceanic, very variable and subject to precipitations carried by the prevailing winds of the Indian Ocean. Since the country is close to the equator, in the area of the doldrums, the Maldives is rarely affected by major cyclones.
Economical Activities ::
The major occupation of Maldivians is fishing. Most of the people live in small villages in islands where water is available. Villages consist of clusters of compounds containing dwellings, small vegetable gardens, and some trees (usually coconut and breadfruit). The soil is sandy and not very fertile. The only form of agriculture practiced is subsistence agriculture. Some of the largest islands produce taro, cassava, millet and sorghum. Other small crops are bananas, papayas, drumstick, and a few other fruit and vegetable varieties.
Social Hierarchies ::
Formerly there was a caste division in Maldives, the lowest caste in the hierarchy being the rāveri or palm-sap tappers. But caste divisions in Maldives were never as prevalent as in the neighboring countries. Instead of a complex caste system, like the Vedic one, in Maldives greater importance was attached to mark the division between the nobles (beìfuỊun) and the common people in society. Presently all traditional distinctions have disappeared and there are no marriage barriers in the Maldive sociological pattern.
Marriage ::
The preferred marriage for Maldivians is endogamous, although exogamous marriages were not uncommon. For a girl the best husband would be deemed to be her mother’s brother’s son and for a boy his mother’s brother’s daughter. Girls used to marry right after the menarche ceremony. Residence is generally uxorilocal. According to Island tradition the husband would go to live to his wife’s house after marriage. For this reason, in Divehi families, parents were happy to have daughters because they would bring boys into their home, whereas sons would ‘bring fish to someone else’s house’, meaning that even during courtship, their interests would already be in the household of their forthcoming wife.
Mortuary Rituals ::
In the Maldives funerary rituals played a very significant part in the society. Divehi people always carefully buried their deceased ones. The location and arrangement of the burial place was a txt that was given great consideration by islanders high or low. Burial grounds and isolated tombs (ziyaaraiy) were the most important landmarks in every island village. Therefore, most traditional celebrations involving cooking and feasting and important social gatherings were associated with funerary ceremonies.
Structures of Power ::


The political structure of the Maldives has remained practically unchanged for centuries. Despite the passage from Monarchy to republic, the contemporary political structure shows a clear continuity with the feudal past in which power was shared among a few families at the top of the social structure. In some islands, the offices have remained within the same family for generations. The village is ruled by an administrative officer called Katību, who serves as the executive headman of the island. Above the Katībus of every atoll is the AtoỊuveriya (Atoll Chief). The power of these local chiefs is very limited and they take few responsibilities. They are trained to report to the government about the situation in their islands and to merely wait for instructions from the central power and to follow them thoroughly 
Religious Patterns ::
Originally Maldivians followed the Dravidian Mother-Goddess worship and its rituals. The country underwent a conversion to Buddhism about 2,000 years ago which brought about an unprecedented flourishing of the Maldivian culture, including the language which by then developed its own script. Almost all significant Maldivian archaeological remains and cultural accomplishments are from that period. But about 800 years ago the country was converted to the Muslim religion and little of the cultural achievements of the Maldivian classical age survived. Since the conversion, the ancient Mother-Goddess cult managed to live on in the local folklore, which is marked by the fear of ancient female spirits, epidemics, and monsters coming from the sea. As centuries went by, Islam, the official religion of Maldivians, became intertwined with the local traditions. However the role of this religion in Maldive society has changed significantly and irreversibly since the beginning of the 1980’s.
Conclusion ::
Nowadays the national economy is mainly dependent on tourism and fishing. Traditional agricultural practices have been mostly abandoned and the islanders rely on imported staples. The Maldives has one of the highest birth rates in the world. The result is that many islands have become overpopulated and are completely covered by homesteads, and that the country is becoming less self-sufficient.
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MALDIVES – ETHNOGRAPHY


INDUSTRY & CRAFTS

An old craftsman working at home
A lacquered wooden box (kullavah). Most Maldivian
lacquer ware is made by artisans of Tulhaadhu island
(South Maalhosmadulu Atoll) This particular box has
a very ancient and beautiful designs, but nowadays 
simpler designs preferred.

A lacquered Wooden column from the royal
palace in Male'. The palace was destroyed
in the 1970s.

A carved wooden ceiling in Male' Hukuru Miskiy.
Maldivian woodcarvers used to do excellent and
intricate woodwork.


A pair of wooden clogs that only be worn nobles. The common
Maldive people were not allowed to wear any kind of footwear
and had to go barefoot.

Ovvalhugondi, a wooden board for game
that is played all over Maldives with small
cowry shells or seeds (the red madhoshi or
the red/black kurundu).
The pattern used in Maldivian coral carving
were practically identical with the ones used in
lacquer work and in woodcarving. The picture
shows a toppled tombstone in a graveyard in
Minicoy, where a bunch of religious fanatics
desecrated the cemeteries in recent times.


A high quality mat from Gadhoo Island (Huvadhu
Atoll). This island keeps producing these beautiful
and solid three-colored mats that were used formerly
by the Maldive royalty.


A woman sorting hau, the grass which is
needed to weave Gadhoo mats. The hau
grass has a light straw color. Part of it is
dyed black another part yellow. The other
fiber used in the production of Gadhoo
mats comes from the bark of the Hybiscus
titiaceus tree, the same bark that Polynesians
use to make "tapa" cloth.
An experienced Gadhoo woman weaving a
high-quality mat. These woman work at home
surrounded by their family.


A Gadhoo girl weaving a low quality mat. Girls
undergoing apprenticeship weave this type of
mats in order to acquire practice.
Bayppolhi, an implement to clean rice made
of screw pine leaf. There is not much in the
way of high-quality basket weaving in the
Maldives, most baskets (mulhoshi) are quickly
disposable.


Blacksmiths used to be found in almost every island.
The two item above are arecanut scissors. The middle
one is kathivalhi, the Maldivian machete or cleaver,
and the below is hanu, powered by ropes, used to
sharpen knives.
Maldivian rope used to be of the highest quality.
The coconut fiber husk is thoroughly beaten until
the strands are loose and fluffy.


Rope in maldives was made by women by hand.
Most women used their times of leisure to make
rope and their hands were never still.


The finished rope lengths are tied in bundles
of a certain size called "bondi" in order to be
brought to the market.

© to elyschaph.blogspot.com | developed by elyschaphh® 






ISLAND LIFE

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LOCAL DRESS

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MAPS

Historical-and-geographical map of Maldives








 

 
 
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1 comment:

  1. The part below the flag has been copied from my ethnography website.

    Xavier Romero-Frias

    ReplyDelete