Early modern smali craftsmanship and sculpture

I stumbled upon this pdf while I was looking for more info about somali headrests and when I realized all of these objects were collected by Italians in the 1930s I realized the handicrafts I had seen in somalia wasn't some siad barre program but an actual continous tradition. The excavated objects and these modern crafts show this tradition never actually died but continues till the modern day. The one I find particularly interesting is the camel sculpture carved out of sepolite which is the stuff they made incense burners out of.
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This stuff is a perfect example of how so many Somali traditions didn't out with islam but we instead maintain these craftsmanship and artisans traditions. Imagine want kind of stuff was produced when the Somali sultanates were at their peaks

@NidarNidar @Idilinaa @Shimbiris
 
I've been trying to find examples of people in the Middle-East and North Africa who still carved animals out of wood or clay and nothing seems to be turning up. Makes me wonder why Somalia was able to maintain its zoomorphic pre-islamic carving traditions.
 
After reading the document more closely, I'm beginning to think the wooden carvings especially the ones after the top row are not somali craftsmanship since its from xuddhur .

Does anybody know if there was somali bantu living in xuddhur. ?
 

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