Killing two birds with one stone?
Any which way one looks at it, there is no denying that this is exactly what Team Inabanga is aiming at.
The jackpot is making raffia as another viable alternative to lick poverty out of the books of Inabanga’s hunger problem. Attracting tourists is one option thereby opening the old town’s rare cache of cultural heritage and traditions.
Also, going back to weaving saguran presents the people a chance to get rooted to their identity and then work from there.
This centuries old raffia loom-weaving industry utilizes fibers extracted from young unopened buri leaf sheaths. Most people believe raffia loom-weaving in fact started in Inabanga.
Although predominantly a home based endeavor, the industry has been revolutionized recently into a firm level production.
This is how the local leaders see the promise of raffia as major local provider of income opportunity.
In this town, weaving is so famous that it is done in 40 of the town’s 50 barangays, a proof that when Inabanganons want the town branded as synonymous to world-class raffia products, it could not be far from truth.
The lowly saguran (old raffia weave) was revolutionized to sell that there are available technologies that could enhance the coarse, rough and drab weave into the world class hinabol.
To emphasize that, four of the best weavers in town embark on a big project, weaving the world’s longest continuous raffia to highlight their claim.
Now introduced with hip op-art designs and color patterns, the raffia is making waves as interior design accents and prime raw material for items of modern lifestyle.
Raffia, a woven fiber is a popular material for placemats, table runners, throw pillows, pillowcases, wall decors, window blinds and screens, bags and pouches, coasters, frames and is now being used as garment accents.
For an age-long industry that has suited revolutionaries under Dagohoy and has ever since supplied the mats for drying palay in this basically agricultural town, it may be safe to say that the raffia has been so intricately woven into the people’s life and identity.
Inabanga, one of the few Bohol towns that has kept alive its raffia weaving through the traditional handlooms. The town now wants to grab world attention and possibly corner a big market of raffia raw materials and finished products in a bid to drastically redo the town’s economic landscape.
For placemats alone, Inabanga can produce 26,000 in a month and the Department of Trade and Industry admitted they have taken a serious look at the product development to help.
With this bright prospect, DTI Regional Director Asteria Caberte admitted the immediate problem now is how to get the volume hit the right market, but the local officialdom looked at exactly the same angle.
Now taking a second hard look at raffia weaving not just to own the recognition as the home of the best weavers in the world, the municipality is rummaging for opportunities that the industry would bring to its people.
First, it’s the pride keeping the best weavers but most of all, raffia is a potent industry that is capable of lifting people out of poverty.
Seen already as the next best tourism circuit in northwestern Bohol, packaging Inabanga raffia as indispensable tourism take-home gift item has elated Team Inabanga. (PIA)
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