Kiswa embroidery a Makkah factory secret

Kiswa embroidery a Makkah factory secret
Updated 29 January 2014
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Kiswa embroidery a Makkah factory secret

Kiswa embroidery a Makkah factory secret

MAKKAH: More than 200 men have been laboring in a factory for eight months to produce the gold-embroidered, black-dyed Kiswa, a silk cover for the Kaaba.
The ornate protective covering produced at the Makkah factory will be draped over the Kaaba on the 9th of Dul Hijjah, which this year corresponds to Oct. 14.
The stitching of Islamic calligraphy in gold threads onto the silk is a skill that has been passed on from generation to generation, said Hussanian Al-Sharif, head of the embroidery department who has worked at the factory for 37 years.
"No one outside this factory knows how to do the embroidery that we do, so that's why our old workers have to train the newcomers for a three-month period before they start," he said.
The old Kiswa will be cut into pieces to be distributed to dignitaries and religious organizations. Recipients regard the fragments as heirlooms.
Nearly all of the 210 workers come from the city of Makkah and most of them have worked there all their lives.
Before the factory was opened in 1927, the 47 pieces of cloth cover were manufactured in Egypt and materials were bought from Sudan, India, Egypt and Iraq.
Today the 658-square-meter covering is made of 670 kg (1,500 lb) of high-quality silk imported from Italy and Switzerland, said Mohammed bin Abdullah Bajuda, the factory's general manager.
"The silk is dyed black here and we spin it ourselves to make the material, then it is hand-embroidered with 120 kg of pure gold and silver," he told Reuters in an interview. Machines to help automate the process were introduced 25 years ago, said Salman Al-Loukmani, head of the materials department.
"Before we used to have a lot more workers and it was a very long process to make the material by hand. Now we have a number of Swiss spinning machines that help us," he said.
Poorer pilgrims sometimes tear parts of the cover during the Haj to take home, but the factory is ready for that too.
"One of the main challenges for the Kiswa factory is the pilgrims who tear pieces of the cover with their hands or other sharp objects, so every hour we have a maintenance team to repair the damage," Bajouda said.