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THE GABI THAT GIRMA WORE by Fasika Adefris

THE GABI THAT GIRMA WORE

by Fasika Adefris & Sara Holly Ackerman ; illustrated by Netsanet Tesfay

Pub Date: Feb. 27th, 2024
ISBN: 9780316470773
Publisher: Little, Brown

The journey of an Ethiopian garment, from the literal seeds of its inception all the way to the people who wear it proudly.

The Gabi, defined in the glossary as “a multilayered traditional Ethiopian cloth,” starts out as cottonseed sown into the rich brown earth. Rich digital illustrations show the cotton sprouting and growing, a farmer plucking fluffy white fibers from the plant, and shemanes (the Amharic word for weavers) working the heddles and wooden treadles of the looms to produce workable textiles. Cumulative verse, similar to “The House That Jack Built,” shows what a slow—but meaningful—process it is (“This is the cottonseed, oval and slight…to sprout the Gabi that Girma wore”). As the Gabi takes shape, with an amber and burgundy border woven into the white fabric, rhyming narration thoughtfully emphasizes the “brightness and light” that decorate the garment. At the marketplace, the Gabi sits alongside other wares before being bought by a woman named Genet, who gives it to a man named Girma. The authors place this purchase into cultural context, making it clear how important it is to Girma; he wears his Gabi on festive occasions and at church on Christmas and Easter, and he and a whole family of smiling and loving faces snuggle up under it on the couch.

An illuminating tale of the love and care that go into creating this East African garment.

(authors’ note) (Picture book. 4-8)