Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Training the gipsy community
From October 2014 onwards, Baladarshan in partnership with SPEED Trust, SITAWT and Samugam Trust (http://samugam.org/) has arranged a training in natural jewelry making. During one month, 7 youngsters hailing from the gypsy community of Pondicherry benefited of this skill training as well as awareness in Fair Trade Principles.
These young people will be provided afterwords with fair paid wages by Baladarshan to realize your favorite necklaces, bracelets and earrings! Placing your orders with us will surely support this marginalized community otherwise condemned in roaming on the city garbage...
Press release - The Hindu - November 8th 2014
A trust helps members of the Narikuravar community by teaching them how to make and market beaded, wooden jewellery, says Liffy Thomas.
Kasturi sorts strings of tiny orange beads of various lengths on her
table and gives them to Kausalya who passes copper-coloured threads
through them for strength. “You must maintain the correct count of the
beads to get the shape of a necklace,” Kausalya instructs Kasturi as she
places the beaded jewellery on her neck.
She then moves to the next table to see how the design is shaping up.
“After beading jewellery for years, it is nice to be teaching others
from my community,” says 20-year-old Kausalya, a Narikuravar from
Nellore and one of the trainers at the South India Tribal Arts and
Science Welfare Trust.
The Trust empowers men and women from the Narikuravar community by helping them start their own wooden jewellery unit.
A batch of 10 Narikuravars is being trained at the Trust’s office at
Anna Salai for a month now, with expenses being met by Speed Trust.
The trust was started 25 years ago by A. Gnana Sundari, a Narikuravar.
She runs Naari Wooden Jewellery which manufactures, supplies and exports all types of beaded jewellery.
“The gypsies are experts at making jewellery with glass but they need to
move on to more trendy stuff. Wooden jewellery is more in demand now.
Also, it is sought after as wood has no side effects, is light-weight
and can be washed,” she says, showing the designs made for export.
Gnana Sundari only trains people from the gypsy community who are
sponsored by non governmental organisations. For some of them, classes
are conducted at their village.
“Speed Trust, for instance, give us the sample of a pattern they want
the participants to be trained in,” she says. Ways to market products,
new patterns and getting the right colour combination are other aspects
of the workshop.
One can earn between Rs. 250 and Rs. 300 a day selling these jewellery.
Gnana Sundari has requests from colleges and other organisations to
conduct similar workshops. But, she is clear she will teach only the
Narikuravars.
“They don’t know any other trade. If I were to start training other groups then it will eat into their business,” she says.
“People can empower this community by buying jewellery designed by them.”
Friday, September 5, 2014
Weaving a succss story
Weaving a success story
Anusha ParthasarathyBala Darshan, a production and sales centre for bags, gives underprivileged women a hope for empowerment
The starred tiles on the floor of Bala Darshan match the little stars on
the woven baskets that line its purple and green walls. Called the Slum
Showroom, this production and sales centre for bags is at Sathyavani
Muthu Nagar, just off Pallavan Salai. Kalyani, Sumathi and Farida, who
live thereabouts, are sitting amidst reams of plastic wire and weaving
baskets in a dizzying mix of colours. Farida is shy and it takes a while
for her to talk. “How many baskets I make depends on how much work I
do,” she says. “Sometimes I take a day, or just a few hours.” She’s the
newbie here, and has been training for four months.
Supporting family
Sumathi, who’s leaning against a pillar, is weaving an orange and
lavender-coloured basket for a client in Japan. She’s been weaving for
four years and the income supports her family of four. “My husband knew
about this place and sent me here to work. It’s close to home,” she
says. Kalyani adds, “Her husband passed away recently. Now she has three
children to feed.” Sumathi nods.
Kalyani herself has been weaving for eight years for additional income.
“When you’re ageing, who’s going to help you? I don’t want to be
dependent on anyone,” she says firmly. K.S. Prasad, the manager of the
showroom, drops in, “We need more people like you, Kalyani.”
Bala Darshan, a part of Speed (Slum People Education and Economic
Development) Trust’s project, began as a production centre for woven
bags, flex bags and wallets in 2009, employing seven women trained by
them in tailoring. But now, it has grown to support more than 100 women
from different parts of the city, and given them a new lease of life.
“One of our first projects when we started in 1999 was tailoring, and we
were not trying to just impart a skill but to promote it. So, in 2002,
we began Bala Darshan to export the products. We also made them weave
baskets, giving employment mostly to women who were HIV positive,
physically challenged or underprivileged,” says Philippe Malet, the
founder. “They are eager to get a job so that they don’t feel
dependent.” Bala Darshan also has 20 organisations that promote products
of disadvantaged people.
Bala Darshan sends its products far and wide. While the tailoring work
is exported to Australia and the U.K., the baskets go as far as Denmark
and Italy. “We also supply to the boutiques of a few star hotels and
retail chains, locally and nationally,” says Philippe. “The women are
happy because otherwise they’d take up jobs as domestic helps or
construction workers. This is convenient; the centre even has a crèche.
Those who can’t work at the centre can take materials from us and work
from home.”
K.S. Prasad has been working with Speed Trust since 2007 and says that
most women weave to support their families. “The husband might not give
them money, will waste most of what he earns on alcohol and won’t send
them out anywhere,” he explains. At the centre, the women work between
10 a.m. and 6 p.m., with an hour for lunch in between. “These days, it’s
getting tough to make a lot of bags because the power situation is
unstable.”
Who buys bags directly at the showroom? “Tourists and other foreigners
who know of the place. We barely get any local people,” says Prasad, “It
could be because they don’t know the place or find the bags a bit
expensive. But, they don’t see its worth or where the money is going.”
Making a difference
Philippe is happy that the showroom is making a difference in his
employees’ lives. “One of the girls who’s been weaving since 2005 is
physically challenged. And by learning this skill and earning through
it, she’s able to support her family,” he says.
Bala Darshan’s flex bags are priced between Rs. 26 and Rs. 310, while
the woven bags range from Rs. 150 to Rs. 1,100. For details, call
6457-2188.
Keywords: Bala Darshan, flex bags, woven bags, Slum Showroom, Speed (Slum People Education and Economic Development) Trust
Printable version | Sep 5, 2014 9:37:29 PM |
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/chen-arts/weaving-a-success-story/article4810246.ece
© The Hindu
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Training women at RGHH, a moving experience
From September 1st 2014, Baladarshan has trained
and extended its partnership to a new producers’ group involved in the hand-woven
wire baskets project. 10 motivated inmates from the Rajiv Gandhi Home for
Handicapped (RGHH), a Pondicherry-based NGO sheltering and assisting physically
challenged women, followed this training leaded by Thenmozhi, this young lady
herself paraplegic, hailing from the slum of Gandhi Nagar in Chennai.
Indeed a beautiful lesson of courage and pride!
Thanks to the successful and growing demand for the colourful
baskets designed by Baladarshan, more and more deserving women can join the
production and make their livelihood significantly improved.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
New Products!
Brought to you by Baladarshan, this decorative and relaxing Wind Circle, Ref. OW20. Made of three different woods (teak, red cedar and white cedar), it helps in meditation !
From our kalamkari tailoring workshop, this lovely pouch 20 x 8 cms, Ref. TA36. It uses traditional kalamkari handpainted with the bamboo stick called 'kalam". Ideal for spectacles, pens, its prices makes this article popular for corporate gifts.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
WORLD FAIR TRADE DAY - 10/05/2014
Fair Trade consumers and producers are the drivers of the growing Fair Trade industry.
Fair
Trade producers and the people buying their products are the real
drivers of the growth of Fair Trade. Backed by promoters, advocates and
hundreds of thousands of volunteers all over the globe, Fair Trade has
become the leading movement promoting social justice today. World Fair
Trade Day, on 10th May is a global day to celebrate this.
In six continents around the world World
Fair Trade Day will be celebrated, led by members of the World Fair
Trade Organization. From the Pacific islands to the Andes, Palestine to
Bangladesh, Mongolia to Kenya, seminars, hunger banquets, fairs,
concerts and drumming, and Fair Trade fashion shows mark the day to
celebrate ‘Fair Trade People.’ Every year, this is the biggest Fair
Trade celebration on the planet.
Fair Trade is a transparent trading system that supports economically marginalised people, fair prices, good working conditions, and long-term partnership through trade. Behind every Fair Trade product on the market there are real people. We tell their story through the WFTO Product Label, which was launched last year when the WFTO Membership approved the new WFTO Guarantee System.
The People promoting Fair Trade
Consumers
and Fair Trade promoters are central to building the Fair Trade
movement. By buying Fair Trade products, consumers have helped
strengthen Fair Trade groups and supply chains, built a network of over
1,000 Fair Trade towns, cities and universities globally; and put
pressure on governments and big businesses to improve their business
practices.
Supporting the change
Fair
Trade has produced change, and we will continue to do so. Fair Trade
has improved the lives of several million small producers worldwide and
their communities. Show your support.
Use our web app and show to the world that Fair Trade People are everywhere, by sharing it on social media channels with hashtags #FairTrade and #WFTDay.
“Fair
Trade was established to enable producers, especially the smaller ones,
to improve their livelihoods in a sustainable fashion. With the support
of conscientious consumers, Fair Trade has grown to become a
sustainable solution to fight poverty and economic crisis. Today, Fair
Trade impacts not only producers but all of us. Fair Trade is a movement
of the people, by the people and for the people.” Natália Leal, WFTO Chief Executive
“Throughout
the years in which I have been involved in Fair Trade, I have
personally met ten thousands of people who have demonstrated how we can
each make a difference. We are a movement of committed individuals
working together towards a common goal and WFTDay celebrates the dedication of this movement and its achievements.” Rudi Dalvai, WFTO President
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
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