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A
Timorese woman demonstrates the technique used to
spin yarn.
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Whether
inscribing them on a clay tablet, publishing them between
the covers of a book, compressing them on CD-ROM, or
enshrining them in an oral heritage, people of all cultures
delight in telling tales. Many thousands of years before
the story of Gilgamesh was first recorded on tablets by
the Babylonians, human beings were quite certainly entertaining,
enlightening, and instructing one another through the medium
of oral narratives.
Today, people all over the world continue to transmit the
collective wisdom of their ancestors by word of mouth. In
East Timor, a country occupying half of an island three
hundred miles north of Australia, storytelling is a major
art form and a pleasurable way of inculcating cultural values
from one generation to the next. The tales, which also help
the local population comprehend their world, are told by
a storytelling specialist known as lia na'in, or
“lord of the word.” This prestigious title reflects the
storytellers’ importance as living repositories and transmitters
of those values the Timorese people venerate.
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