A towelling cloth
Sofina: This is a ‘gamcha’, this is very
commonly used back home, you can use it as a towel or women use it
to dry their hair...
Abdul Noor: Ladies can use it and men can use
it and children. When we were young, we used to have a bath in a
pond. You would take your clothes off and wear one of these and
then you can swim and then dry it off. This gamcha was very cheap
– probably less than 50 pence!
Another thing we used to see when I was young, in dairy farms
they used to have these hanging up to make cheese. The liquid would
come through and the cheese was left behind. This is really, really
useful. Women also use it to dry their hair. They are still in used
in our country.
Sunder: This one is not that good quality
though, it is quite thin. If you wash it, it's going to get
thinner
Sofina: I’ve got a very interesting piece here.
I know this very well. It is something which is very commonly used
in Bangladesh, India and other Asian countries. In my country it is
called a ‘gamcha’, and it is the quickest and easiest form of
towelling cloth. Women back home, they have very long hair and
after they come out of the bath they tie their hair up and wrap it
around and this will absorb the water. Men also use it in the
fields to wipe away their sweat.



David: Is it cotton material?
Sofina: Yes, that is why it dries very quickly.
Children can use it, they would wrap it around them and then go for
a swim. So it is a very common piece of cloth that is used in
Bangladesh. Men, women, older people. Everybody uses it.
Tasneem: When I arrived in London for the first
time in 1975, I can remember, I bought one ‘gamcha’ with me because
I had long hair – very curly and thick hair
– and I couldn’t use the towels here because they are
so bulky. I couldn’t wrap the around my head.
David: So it absorbs water very easily?
Habib: I don’t think that it does absorb water
that much, but what you can do is squeeze it out.
Sofina: It is quick drying as well. Because it
is very fine you just put it out in the sun and it literally dries
within minutes, and you can reuse it again and again. People use it
all the time.
David: It’s like a big handkerchief!
Abdul Noor, Sofina and Sunder, Bengali Men's
Group
David, National Coalition for Black Volunteering
Tasneem,
Coram