Kind-hearted viewers,
welcome to A Journey
through Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Today, we will travel
to the beautiful
African nation of Malawi
and have a glimpse of her
traditional village life.
The Republic of Malawi
is located
in southeast Africa,
bordering Zambia,
Tanzania and Mozambique.
The famous Lake Malawi
extends north to south
through two-thirds
of the country.
The nation’s Lake
Malawi National Park
and the Chongoni Rock
Art Area are listed
as United Nations
Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)
World Heritage Sites.
Malawi is also celebrated
for her indigenous dance,
wood carving,
and oil paintings.
For centuries,
people in Malawi’s
countryside lived
in harmony with nature.
In an effort to revive
this sustainable tradition,
a culture center has been
established in Lilongwe.
Let’s meet
our wonderful local host,
Mr. Shombi Banda,
who will introduce to us
the everyday life
of traditional Malawians.
Hi, I’m Shombi Banda
from Malawi,
the village manager here.
If you look around here,
you can see that there’s
a big forest here, and the
village has been designed
in a different way.
This is how
Malawi was looking like
a hundred of years ago.
And what we are trying
to remind the Malawians,
that in those days,
all the people, they were
living a simple life,
but it was a nice life.
They were living a happy
and enjoyable life;
it’s natural.
We are trying to
keep our culture in place.
So that’s why we are
trying to put everything
in the place, so that our
kids can come here and
see what it was like here.
It was nice here.
Deep-rooted
in Malawian custom
is their respect for nature.
Whether it is a piece
of wood, or a handful
of soil, everything
is greatly cherished
and minimally disturbed.
Our main reason here
is to conserve
the natural resources.
So one of them is the trees.
The scientists say that
whenever you want to
have good rains, you
have to have more trees.
So if you can look around
here, we didn’t
cut any tree here.
We built houses
wherever there was
a space for them
to build the houses.
We just cut the grass short,
leave the trees alive,
so that the weather here,
you can differentiate
from the town to here,
it’s cool here,
just because we have got
a lot of natural resources
around us here.
If you can see, our house
has been built with trees.
All of it was dead trees;
we didn’t cut a live tree, no.
We used the grass
to thatch the roof.
And even the wall
is made from the reeds.
If you can go inside there,
it’s cool and warm.
This is how Malawi
hundred years [ago]
was like.
So from here you can see
that even the cupboard
is made from the reeds.
Even the wall
is made from the reeds
and the bamboos.
The floor,
there is no cement;
it’s a floor made from mud
coming from the river.
So Malawians can build
nice houses from
the resources which they
have nearby their homes.
The sweeping area is less
than the area whereby
we are dumping the leaves.
It’s like we are trying to
leave the nature
helping its own.
When the leaves fall down,
they’re making manure
for these trees.
The great enlightened sage
Master Lao Tzu
once said, “Be content
with what you have,
rejoice in the way
things are.
When you realize
there is nothing lacking,
the whole world
belongs to you.”
Indeed,
a simple and natural life
is full of satisfaction
and happiness.
In those days people had
different types of houses.
That house was made
from reeds, and this one
is made from the mud.
These are the bricks
made from the mud.
Simple, we just
take the soil, put it
into the molding frame,
take out the brick,
and we build this.
We didn’t travel
anywhere to buy this,
we made it from here.
And we didn’t damage
anything, we made it
from natural resources.
And you can see that
that house
is a four corner one,
this one is a round one.
In those days, people
in the village, especially
the old, old people
like grandma, grandpa,
they used to sleep in
a round house like this one.
And there was always
a fire in the middle.
Older people, they used
to chat with the kids
during night,
so they were sitting
around the wall, putting
the fire in the middle,
telling them nice stories,
folk tales, sharing ideas,
doing this, doing that.
That’s the reason
they got the round houses.
After these messages,
we’ll continue our tour
of the culture center
in Malawi’s Lilongwe.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
Let’s conserve our culture,
let’s conserve
our natural resources
so that in the future
they can earn a good living
like what our parents
were doing.
Welcome back to
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television
as Mr. Shombi Banda
from the culture center
at Lilongwe continues his
introduction to Malawi’s
traditional village life.
So in our traditional
local village, you can find
there is pottery,
there are carvings,
there are buildings
and there are weavings.
Everything was there;
that’s why there was barter.
It was exchanging
of goods to goods.
So then
I’ll show you around.
In those days, most
of the time during night
there was drumming,
clapping of hands,
singing beautiful songs,
dancing beautiful dances.
So you can see
that we are separating
the accommodation
and the industrial area.
Most of the times,
there is more noise here.
So we are separating
the industrial area
to the accommodation
to give a chance
for the children
to sleep well there,
not to hear more noise.
This is our gallery shop.
As I said earlier on,
a village in those days,
it’s people living together,
so they didn’t need
someone to do
something for them.
Among them there were
some painters,
potters, carvers.
So we are trying
to continue
that type of habit, saying
that they don’t need
to travel long distance
looking for something.
They always find
something around them.
So this is our gallery.
These pictures are made
from different artists.
During Sundays,
small children are being
given lessons to learn
how to paint these things,
so that we can continue
what our parents
were doing, to be creative.
This is the weaving shop.
And here we are doing
also the very same thing,
during Sundays,
we give children lessons
how to make the tables,
how to make the baskets,
how to weave the elephant,
doing that and that.
So this is our carving shop.
We are bringing
different artists
from different areas
to do their things here,
so that our children
can see them.
Mr. Gomez, who
is the owner of this shop,
can explain more
about this shop.
Indeed, we do
wood carvings here.
Carving is
something that started
way back in Malawi, and
it’s an inherited career;
there is no actual school
for carving,
but children, people
learn from one another
to do the work of art.
Art is a part
of Malawian culture
to demonstrate what
Malawians and Africans do.
They express what
they see, what they know,
and what is happening
out there through art
like wood carving.
That’s why you may see
some carvings
women pounding,
some beating drums;
so actually we carve
what we see out there.
This is our pottery shop.
This is a machine where
they make the pots;
you can see there is a pot
on top there, which
they have just made.
So after making the pots
like this, they let them dry
for about 7 days.
After drying, there is
a big oven, whereby
they put inside all the pots,
close the door, and
put the fire to burn them
to make them hard.
They made monkeys,
people, pots – small pots,
big pots, of different sizes
and of different designs.
Some of these pots,
like these pots,
you can see them here,
they do work like fridges.
You can keep your water
in here, it will be cool
even during October.
October here is too hot.
But they can still be cool
in here.
So you can see,
they made everything from
the clay, even the plates.
In those days,
our old people,
they don’t go to the shops
to buy plates, no.
They were
making everything,
from around here,
from their local resources,
like this.
Malawian arts
and handicrafts
reflect a harmonious
cultural heritage in which
the pure-hearted people
of the nation
take great pride.
To Mr. Banda, Malawi
is a gift from Heaven,
and the Malawians
are working hard
to conserve it for
their future generations.
The tradition of Malawi
is so rich.
Malawi is so beautiful and
so rich in cultural things,
environment, trees, lakes,
mountains, and even,
you can see the sky,
it’s blue here, that means
we are blessed.
I’m telling you
we are blessed.
In Malawi, we believe in
discussing things and if
there’s something wrong,
we always sit down
and discuss things.
Malawians are peace lovers
and we have never seen
Malawians fighting.
The future of Malawi
is so bright.
Now we are
conserving the forest.
We now know
the importance of trees,
the importance of
practicing good methods
of agriculture.
Lots of things
are changing,
that means Malawi
has got a bright future.
Malawi is nice.
Malawi is
a small country, with
only 13 million people
but beautiful, lovely,
peace lovers.
You can breathe
the natural air.
And I am appealing to you,
all people
from outside Malawi,
to come and visit us,
and we are going to
bring you love.
We are peace lovers. Yes.
Please visit us.
We are waiting for you.
Thank you.
Our sincere appreciation,
Mr. Shombi Banda,
for your heartfelt
introduction to
the Malawi culture, your
inspirational optimism
for the future, and
your gracious invitation.
May the world’s
sustainable traditions
be cherished
as humans take
responsible stewardship
of our one and only
God-given earthly home.
Beauty-loving viewers,
thank you for being with us
today on A Journey
through Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Up next is
Vegetarianism:
The Noble Way of Living,
after Noteworthy News.
May your life be guided
by your inner divinity.