Textile Heritage

The Cloth That Wraps the Living and the Dead

In the Highlands of Madagascar, a wild-silk shawl binds generations to the earth and to each other.

Rija Rasoamanarivo 14 March 2024 9 min read

On the morning of the famadihana, the air in Ambositra smells of damp earth and woodsmoke. Families arrive carrying folded bundles of lamba akotofahana — wild-silk shawls woven in horizontal bands of crimson, indigo, and cream — which they will use to wrap the bones of their ancestors during the turning-of-the-bones ceremony. I spent three weeks last June in the Betsileo highlands, watching these shawls move between the living and the dead.

A Thread Older Than Memory

The silk itself comes from the Borocera madagascariensis moth, a native species whose cocoons are harvested from tapia forests in the central highlands. Unlike the cultivated Bombyx mori of East Asia, this wild silk — called landibe — carries the irregularity of untamed fiber. Each thread varies slightly in thickness, creating what textile scholars call abrash: a subtle tonal unevenness that machines cannot replicate.

Each horizontal stripe in a lamba is a sentence. The colors speak of status, region, and intention — crimson for ceremony, indigo for the everyday, gold-thread for the honored dead.

In the weaving quarter of Ambositra, master weaver Voahangy Rasoanandrianina showed me how the supplementary-weft technique produces the brocaded motifs known as akotofahana. Her loom, a simple wooden frame barely a meter wide, produces shawls that sell for three months' wages in Antananarivo's artisan markets.