Home  Introduction   How to Use   Contents   Resources 

Learning from the Maya About Diversity, Culture and Ecology~Teacher’s and Parent’s Guide
with Maya Arts and Crafts of Guatemala/Artes y Artesanías Mayas de Guatemala Coloring Book


page 1 | page 2

Lesson 2. Bags, Baskets, Bundles, Gourds, and Nets

Vocabulary

ARTISAN: A person who has skills to perform the tasks from start to finish to make pottery, carve wood, weave cloth or make other kinds of useful and pleasing items called arts and crafts. Another word for artisan is craftsman or craftsmen.

BACKSTRAP LOOM: An apparatus for weaving cloth. It is made with sticks and warp threads stretched between the front stick which is tied to a post or tree, and the back stick, which is attached to a strap around the weaver’s waist.

GOURDS: Biodegradable natural containers made from the dried hard rind of fruits from a tree or vine.

INDIGENOUS: Pertaining to the original inhabitants of a particular area.

MAGUEY: A plant with large spiny leaves common throughout Mexico, Central and South America which yields hard fibers for making rope and bags and other items.

HERITAGE: Actual things or ideas, customs, skills, etc. passed on from earlier generations.

TRADITION: The handing down of customs, information, beliefs without written instructions.

TUMPLINE: A strap that people put over the forehead or chest, often with a rope attached to a net used to carry a load carried on.

Materials

  • Copies for each child of the “Maya Ways of Carrying Things downloadable coloring and discussion sheets drawing A and drawing B. (These require Adobe Acrobat Reader to save and open files.)
  • A copy of the Coloring Book for reference in presenting lesson material. It is best if each child can have one or two copies of coloring book pages showing bags, baskets, net making and gourd decoration.
  • A bag of good size with a strap long enough to put around the forehead and allow the bag to rest on the back (see sheet A). A handmade Maya net bag is best but a canvas or other type of bag will do, as long as the strap is about 2” wide and about 36” long.
  • Several hand made baskets with flat bottoms at least 8”- 9” in diameter. Wash cloths or similar sized soft cloths to be folded under the basket
  • Cloths about 40" x 45" or 36" x 36" to make a bundle. A Maya woven cloth is best one but any colorful cloth of similar size can be used. Use a man’s size handkerchief to make a small bundle to wrap coins.
  • Gourds, small ones of the size used for drinking and/or larger. See Resources for more information about items in a Teacher’s Kit to accompany this lesson.
Activities

1 - Maya Ways of Carrying Things

Have copies of sheets “Maya Ways of Carrying Things” for each child to color and to discuss. Using the drawing on sheet A, ask children to count the different ways Maya people are carrying things. Hint: you can find a total of ten approaches.

Answers (in the drawing, clockwise from bottom left):

  1. boy with gourd for drinking water
  2. girl with tumpline to carry pottery water jug and
  3. the same girl carries a basket with a handle
  4. woman with baby in cloth sling and
  5. the same woman carries a basket on her head
  6. Woman with arm bundle and
  7. she also carries a stack of cloths on her head held together by twine
  8. man with bag over shoulder
  9. man carrying bag with strap over forehead like a tumpline (beyond him are shown three methods already counted: one women with gourd on her head and two with baskets)
  10. woman with tumpline and net

Ask children to look at drawings A and B and notice that only women carry baskets. Maya men do not have the custom of carrying baskets and it would not even occur to them to do it. Discuss this with students.

Using sheet B, ask children to name the ways of carrying in this drawing. Hint: there are five ways in all.

Answers:

  1. on womens’ heads: a basket, a rolled up mat tied with twine a bundle, and a bundle.
  2. bundles supported with tied ends over the forehead of two women
  3. one bundle on a man’s shoulder,
  4. a bundle over a girl’s arm
  5. what way of carrying is left out of the list of answers? Answer: Carrying a basket using hands and balancing it on the hip.

2 - Making Drawings About How We Carry Things

Ask children to use crayons (not felt pens) to draw some of the following:

  • themselves, friends, family — showing how they carry various articles
  • a UPS delivery person, a pizza delivery person or anyone who carries things as part of their job

Discuss with students to the ways their drawings showing people carrying things compare to those of the Maya as seen on the coloring sheets or in the Coloring Book. How are they similar? How are they different?

3 - Easy to Do! Carrying a Load with a “Tumpline”

See drawing A, look for the man with the strap of his bag over the forehead, this is called a “tumpline.” As seen in drawing B, a bundle can also be used in tumpline fashion — but is harder to do.

Using a fairly large bag with a wide shoulder strap long enough strap (2-3” wide and about 36” long) can double as the tumpline . A handmade net bag is best but a canvas or other type will do. The shoulder strap is simply put around the forehead and the bag rests on the back. Carrying a bag in this way can elicit gales of laughter from children but such reactions can become points of discussion.

Ask students

  • what is the benefit of using the tumpline method to carry things? Answer: the tumpline allows people to carry very large or heavy loads more easily, because the muscles of the upper body are used very efficiently. Carrying with with a tumpline allows people to carry loads that are sometimes larger than themselves! This cannot be done if you are carrying something in front or over the shoulder.
  • why is it not done in the USA or Canada? Answer: most of us have either plastic or cloth bags for their ordinary carrying needs and vehicles to transport larger articles. And many people seldom walk to do errands. They might even take their car to a nearby corner store!
  • how would they would feel carrying loads down a street using the tumpline method?

4 - Easy to Do! Carrying a Basket

The secret of carrying a basket on the head is: first, fold into quarters a washcloth, or a piece of soft cloth such as flannel and place it on the head. (The traditional way of arranging the cloth that goes under the basket is more complicated but this simple approach works well with a small or medium size basket.) IMPORTANT: the basket must have a flat bottom!

Put the basket on top of the cloth — something to weigh down the basket a little will help make it more stable, but is not necessary. By walking with a straight back the basket almost magically will not slide off the head.

Ask children

  • if as they carry a basket, they can feel how important it to have good posture and that a basket WILL ONLY stay on their head if they do
  • how would they feel carrying a basket on their head while walking down the street?

5 - Easy to Do! Making and Carrying a Bundle

The most simple way to make a very small bundle is by using a cloth handkerchief. Put a few coins in the center of the handkerchief and tie together first two opposite corners, then the other two opposite corners. You will then have a very small bundle! You can carry it in your hand or put it in your pocket.

To make a bigger bundle, take a larger piece of cloth (about 40" x 45" or 36" x 36" ), put an item such as a sweater in the middle of it. In the same way as in making the small bundle, tie together two opposite corners and the other two opposite corners. The resulting bundle can be put over the arm like a purse through the space under the knot on top (see sheet B, look at the girl in the right hand corner).

6 - Discussion: How & Why We Carry Things

Ask students to talk about why it is more common in for people in Guatemala to carry loads with with the tumpline or some other way. Answer: BECAUSE THEY HAVE TO CARRY THINGS!

Some people in Guatemala and Central America live in areas without roads, and fewer people have their own vehicles than in Canada or the USA.

Pretend that plastic or paper bags had never been invented — how would people carry things? Hint: name all the ways of carrying things seen on sheets A and B.

Discuss the pros and cons of walking and carrying things yourself as contrasted to mainly carrying things using motorized transportation —

Assessment

Children should be able to

  • show good understanding of how making and using bags, baskets, bundles, nets, and gourds are important in the lives of the Maya
  • discuss how looking at ourselves and how we carry things tells a story about us, and how people in other countries who carry things in their own ways tell us about themselves
  • make a small bundle with coins or a small item inside, tied in the manner described above
  • carry a basket on their head easily across a room

Lesson 2 Resources

A Teacher’s Kit from Terra Experience, a Fair Trade Federation member, includes Maya shoulder bags, gourds and a bundle cloth to accompany this lesson. See Teachers Resources at www.terraexperience.com.

Books
Technology in the Time of the Maya by Judith Crosher. Raintree, Steck and Vaughn, 1998. Has sections on crafts, architecture, food use, the calendar, glyph writing system and more. Excellent!

A Life of Their Own: An Indian Family in Latin America by Aylette Jenness & Lisa Kroeber. Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1975. Gives a picture of many aspects of Maya daily life, including carrying, goods and the part that crafts play.

Websites

Native American Technology and Art: www.nativetech.org

Further information on related books & websites can be found on the Resources page

page 1 | page 2 | next