Then there was Eva Brozowsky, a Manuscript Conservator from the University of Hamburg who came and
shared her considerable knowledge at the Manuscript Library. She also managed
to tap into Yelfa’s treasure trove of knowledge concerning plants and natural
dyes for ink making- a knowledge I had not realized he possessed. Djenné has
been celebrated in the past for the excellence of her inks, and it is said that
the scribes of Timbuktu travelled here in order to buy supplies. This was something that interested Eva, just
as it has fascinated me. The making of inks from natural materials surrounding
us, using the same plants as Yelfa the Marabout uses for his magic talismans
and his natural medicines seemed somehow poetic and mysterious to us: a Djenné
alchemy...
We had a visionary morning in the Djenne
Manuscript Library when we suddenly realized the simple reason why the Timbuktu
scribes had bought their inks in Djenné: There
is no vegetation in Timbuktu!!!! However
meagre, the vegetation of Djenné is lush and abundant in comparison. All the inks
are made by plants here, that is to say, they were made by plants- now everyone is using imported Chinese inks...
Eva is now sufficiently excited about this to attempt to persuade the University of
Hamburg to set up a research programme at the library here!
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