





Dreamland Taziya - POSTCARD SET
Size: 4 × 6 in.
Material: 315 gsm cardstock
Options: sets of 5, 10, and 15
(Everything is made-to-order; please allow 1-2 weeks for processing before shipping. If your payment doesn’t go through the first time, try again using an incognito window. I am trying to resolve this cookies/web history issue with Squarespace.)
“From the outside, one might mistake the brightly-sequined Taziya—constructed painstakingly with a bamboo frame and materials ranging from cloth, colored paper and wood planks to thermocol, tinsel, and plastic beads—to be too colorful and fantastical against the black backdrop of Muharram season. Is it an expression of joy? No, it is a labor of love crafted by the hands of the masses for whom the physical Karbala is often out of reach. Why then do most Taziyas visually differ from the shrines, even with reference images of the Haramain being plenty in our day and age?
The goal of Taziya-making is not to replicate to a T the appearance of Imam Hussain’s shrine. A Taziya is meant to embody the feeling of awe, the overwhelming beauty one encounters at the door of the Karbalai martyrs, the eternal message of hope and perseverance against all oppression that one takes away and plants in every struggle back home. It is love localized as far as Trinidad, Tobago, and Jamaica, as ancestral memory evolving with every step and winding journey of its spiritual descendants. A Taziya is a dream brought down to Earth, though never grounded, always in procession, always traversing the bounds of time and space.”
Size: 4 × 6 in.
Material: 315 gsm cardstock
Options: sets of 5, 10, and 15
(Everything is made-to-order; please allow 1-2 weeks for processing before shipping. If your payment doesn’t go through the first time, try again using an incognito window. I am trying to resolve this cookies/web history issue with Squarespace.)
“From the outside, one might mistake the brightly-sequined Taziya—constructed painstakingly with a bamboo frame and materials ranging from cloth, colored paper and wood planks to thermocol, tinsel, and plastic beads—to be too colorful and fantastical against the black backdrop of Muharram season. Is it an expression of joy? No, it is a labor of love crafted by the hands of the masses for whom the physical Karbala is often out of reach. Why then do most Taziyas visually differ from the shrines, even with reference images of the Haramain being plenty in our day and age?
The goal of Taziya-making is not to replicate to a T the appearance of Imam Hussain’s shrine. A Taziya is meant to embody the feeling of awe, the overwhelming beauty one encounters at the door of the Karbalai martyrs, the eternal message of hope and perseverance against all oppression that one takes away and plants in every struggle back home. It is love localized as far as Trinidad, Tobago, and Jamaica, as ancestral memory evolving with every step and winding journey of its spiritual descendants. A Taziya is a dream brought down to Earth, though never grounded, always in procession, always traversing the bounds of time and space.”