Craft & Heritage

The Geometry of Liberation

How three centuries of Maroon carvers inscribed sovereignty, memory, and cosmology into every interlocking groove of tropical hardwood.

AK Ama Koranteng · March 14, 2025 · 9 min read

In the forest workshops along the Upper Suriname River, a carving tradition persists that is unlike anything else in the Americas. The Saramaka and Ndyuka Maroon peoples—descendants of Africans who escaped Dutch plantation slavery between 1685 and 1762—developed a geometric visual language called tembe that encodes treaties, genealogies, and spiritual cosmologies into dense interlocking patterns of tropical hardwood. Each groove is incised with a hand-forged knife, then highlighted with red ochre, white kaolin clay, and black soot to make the geometry legible against the dark grain.

Treaty Rights in Every Groove

I spent two weeks in the village of Pikilio last autumn watching master carver Adjako Djawanki work on a ceremonial stool meant for a village elder’s investiture. Each incised line followed a logic I could barely parse—paired hooks that mirrored the bilateral clauses of the 1760 peace treaty with the Dutch, scroll fields that mapped the rivers marking Saramaka territorial boundaries. The stool was a legal document as much as a seat of honor.