This week Firuz at Tajik-Tajik blog neweurasia shared the story of a handicraftsman from Istravshan (northern Tajikistan) who was involved in leather working since childhood and for almost 60 years. He inherited this skill from his father and his father from his father. This tradition is inherited from father to son for many centuries.
The handicraftsmen say that the leather working is a very difficult and painstaking work. Process of a fell of one cow requires the effort of three men in ten days.
Meanwhile, the cultural life in tajik cities seems to be far less creative than the traditional arts legacy. A new author on Tajik-English blog neweurasia C offers some thoughts on the Tajik music scene. He thinks that people in Tajikistan are so isolated from big music events happening in the world that they are ready to go to local concerts even if they are fed up with them.
Whatever place you go you see the same faces on the stage as well in the auditorium. And it seems that faces that I see in the auditorium come not because they are extremely interested in the concert or in the group, they come because they are starving for cultural events.

















Send this by E-mail













Onnik Krikorian763 posts
Juliana Rincón Parra111 posts
Kelly Proctor9 posts
Portnoy26 posts
Sinisa Boljanovic23 posts
Rebekah Heacock19 posts
J. Nambiza Tungaraza17 posts
Yasmine Abu Khazneh1 posts
Roy Rojas11 posts
Skye Hernandez70 posts
Janine Mendes-Franco2385 posts
Meng Zhang18 posts
Dear Vadim:
I hope you can help me, please!
I am trying to get in touch with ANY Tajik artists. Do you have ANY email addresses or websites, please? I would GREATLY appreciate it.
Thank you.
–Libor–