Typical profile of a master kami.

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Mar 5, 1999
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We talk about master kamis but I have not really put forth a definition and since we are thinking about sending gifts to them perhaps it is time. This is a typical profile of a master kami.

The master kami was born a kami in both caste and work. For as long as anybody can remember his forefathers were kamis. At perhaps age 5 or 6 he begins helping his father and grandfather in the arun. He learns to pull the chain on the bellows. He gathers charcoal. He brings water for the quenching pitcher. He learns the names of tools and procedures.

At around 12 years of age he is using the hammer and does much of the pounding of steel that goes on in the shop. He can make a few simple farm implements by himself. Sometimes his effort produces a quality tool, sometimes not.

By the time he is 20 he can fire up the shop by himself and can produce many items. He can make a decent khukuri by himself but it sometimes will not be perfect.

At 30 we can call him an intermediate.

At around 40, depending on the person, he is just about ready for master kami status. The grandfather has left his body and his father is too old to do much work so it is on his shoulders to take over the operation of the arun. At this stage he has made every farm tool that can be made. He can make a perfect khukuri 99% of the time. He understands steel and knows how to work it. He has made hinges for gates and cabinets. He has made prybars and wedges. He has made sickles, sythes, axes, rakes and hatchets. He can make rings, bracelets, ear rings, pliers, tongs, awls, nails, needles, metal baskets, and rivets. If you show him a sketch of something you want made and give him a few verbal instructions he can produce what you want.

He talks with you as he works and often chuckles and sometimes swears. He may pause to take a sip of rahksi and will offer you a drink. You are amazed at how easily, quickly and skillfully he performs his work. It is a pleasure to watch him and you realize that his is a true artform. He will tell you about things his grandfather made -- perhaps a lock for a door with a handmade key for entry. And, he will tell you he is probably the best kami in Nepal or at least the best in his district. Then you know that here is a true master kami.
 
Uncle, you truly have poetry in your soul I think. I'm constantly amazed by how people with so little can put so much into their work. The dedication of one's life to their art is getting to be a rare things these days, and your description of the Kami's dedication was quite beautiful. Let's just hope they can stay unchanged by the spread of Western ideals and keep their art and craft pure for years to come!!!

Chris

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;-P


[This message has been edited by Pagala Gorwa (edited 25 July 1999).]
 
A lot of people are dedicated to their art.Who would wade through the texts,(some of which are incomprehensible to my Bro.,who is a post grad.){Could they be a little more vague?];and this was a current sailing text from USNA.We all know what leeward and windward means and luffing ,jibing, tacking and running with the wind.How can this be complex? Much less we do the schools,the exercises, the drills and the utter nonsense.In time you may have the power to cut the effect of the nonsense,but it does not go away.Give me strong ship and the wind at my back.Jabberwaky.

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Thanks, crazy whitey, for your kind words. I am not a poet but perhaps a decent reporter. I can sometimes recount things I have seen and toss in a few feelings of my own.

And ghost, dedication is the name of the game.

I wish I knew a way to get the sounds and smells into the picture. The whoosh of the bellows, the clear ringing of the hammer on the steel, the smell of the charcoal and red hot steel add a dimension I cannot capture.

Then there is the unseen but definitely present magic of the shop and the kami which reminds me of the wheel of life itself. A rusty old spring, discarded and long forgotten, considered useless by most, being reincarnated by the kami into a beautiful and useful khukuri with a new purpose and a new soul. Nothing ever created, nothing ever destroyed -- only the inexorable turning of the wheel.

Uncle Bill
 
I been there.T.S.Elliot is who This Ignorant Savage was refering to.I perfer Macavity the Cat to the Hollow Men.

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Hi Uncle Bill,

I guess the kami is actually the blacksmith.

Would he be interested in more tools or does he usually make his own?

Will
 
Will, thanks to a great pal, an old Nam Ranger officer, who actually supplied the gift of a couple of old, rusty brace and bits, we got these to my Gurkha brother down at shop 1 and they are treasured. We purposely left them dirty and rusty so as not to alert Nepal customs to potential value (400% import duty) and we got them through customs for $1.35 USD.

The answer to your question is tools are highly valued.

Uncle Bill
 
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