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Nepalese paper, with unique toughness and softness, is of ancient
origin. It is difficult to trace how and when this traditional paper
came to be introduced in Nepal. According to history, the Chinese
people knew the art of making paper even before the Christian era;
Next, this paper craft spread to Tibet where those days the Lama
Buddhists started scribing Buddhist manuscripts. Even in those
ancient days, there was trade and intercourse between Nepal and
Tibet: the, merchants of Nepal went to Tibet and the people of Tibet
used to come to Nepal on pilgrimage to famous Buddhist shrines of
the Kathmandu Valley. So it is likely the people of Nepal learnt the
technique of making paper from the Tibetans. It is, however,
noteworthy that in Nepal the people engaged in making traditional
papers are generally those who live in the northern regions of Nepal
- specially those who live on the caravan routes beading to Lhasa in
Tibet;
The art of papermaking gradually spread to the western parts of
Nepal - specially among the Gurungs and Magars. In the eastern
parts, the Rais excelled in this technique. The Nepalese paper was
much in use in all the offices of the government even up to 1950.
But on the advent of democracy in Nepal, the government offices
started using paper imported from India. This, of course, came to
affect, adversely, the age-old technology of paper making in Nepal.
A great slack occurred in the Nepalese paper industry. Many
paper-makers were thrown out of job. Recently, however, the
Traditional Nepalese Paper came to retrieve recognition. Foreign
visitors, who see the value of the handmade-paper, have started
purchasing it for a variety of uses in their own homes. Thus these
tourists have helped to boost up the traditional paper-craft. This
is one of the reasons why the production of this paper is still
thriving in places like Baglung and Dailekh in the west, and
Solukhumbu, Ramechhap and Barabise in the east of Nepal.
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