Weaving across America
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Deepa Bharath
Bean burritos, sandwiches and egg rolls don’t make much sense to Surya
Lal.
The 28-year-old carpet weaver from Saraichatrashah, a tiny village
near Varanasi on the banks of the river Ganges, is probably more used to
rice cakes, o7 rotlisf7 , or rustic wheat bread, and o7 bhajif7 , a
mishmash of vegetables.
But for a week, Lal, Shyam Narain and Harinath Patel have literally
tasted a piece of America as they demonstrated their craft to visitors at
Glabman’s Furniture and Interior Design in Costa Mesa, their second stop
in a nationwide, three-month tour.
“I love the food,” said Narain, speaking in Hindi. “I don’t even know
what it’s called or what it’s made of. But it tastes good.”
Strange as it may seem, visitors shared Narain’s sentiments -- not
about the food but the rugs he weaves. They didn’t know how the rugs were
made or where they came from, but they loved the way it looked on their
hardwood floors.
The weavers were able to make the trip across the globe thanks to a
partnership between the United Nations Development Program and the Indian
government. For all three, who have rarely left their village, it was
their first time on an airplane.
“Everything is so clean here,” Patel said. “I don’t feel like I’m out
of place, although I don’t understand the language. I think it’s because
the people are so nice.”
On Friday, the trio sat cross-legged in front of the 12-foot-tall
wooden loom that weighs almost 5,000 pounds as they cut and knotted
threads, working on a 9-by-12-foot carpet.
A carpet that size is made up of more than 2 million knots and takes
six months to complete with four weavers working three to four hours a
day. They weave colorful woolen yarn into a panel of cotton threads that
serves as the base for the carpet.
Back home, the weavers said, they mostly work during the day because
of erratic power supply. Most nights, there is no electricity.
These model weavers at Glabman’s wore traditional Indian clothes --
cotton o7 kurtaf7 and o7 pajamaf7 , a loose shirt and pants, a
hand-woven vest and a white cotton cap.
In their village and in scores of neighboring hamlets where people
work from their mud and brick homes, weaving is not an art or a craft.
It’s a vocation, which they know will put food on their tables.
These part-time weavers make as much as 3,000 rupees, about $60 a
month. When they are not making rugs, they farm the land bequeathed to
them by their ancestors. They grow rice, wheat and seasonal vegetables.
None of them ever took courses in weaving. It is knowledge that has
been passed down from one generation to another, said 40-year-old Patel,
who started weaving when he was 17.
“I was never interested in all of this when I was a boy,” he said.
“But I realized I have to take interest. There’s nothing much I can do in
my village but farm and weave.”
Narain, 35, had a similar experience. He was barely 14 when his father
introduced him to weaving.
“I was just playing and goofing around,” he said with a laugh. “I
never went to school after second grade. I’ve grown up watching my dad
weave. I guess it just came naturally.”
The designs are provided by Masterlooms, the company they work for.
Masterlooms employs more than 200,000 weavers near the Varanasi area,
said Mahesh Ohri, the company’s production coordinator for India and
Nepal.
“This is a great opportunity for these three,” he said. “They would’ve
never imagined in the wildest dreams that they would come to the United
States.”
For visitors, it is an education, event coordinator Kathy Jarvis said.
“We wanted to stimulate an appreciation for this art among customers,”
she said. “But more than anything else, it’s to show them that these are
people, and this is what they do, and this is how they live. It’s simply
amazing.”
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