Published on AMRC (http://www.amrc.org.hk) 
Home-Based Weavers in Varanasi Form a Union in The Struggle To Preserve Their 
Culture and Livelihood 
By amrc 
Created 10/15/2008 - 16:25 







Varanasi is an ancient, famous and culturally rich district of Uttar Pradesh 
State of India. Varanasi is also a holy city which rests on the banks of the 
Ganges, and home to banarasi saris (Indian dress that women wear) that are 
woven predominantly on hand looms. They are woven by highly skilled weavers, 
and are considered some of the finest saris in India, made of finely woven silk 
and decorated with elaborate embroidery and engravings. Because of these 
engravings, these saris are relatively heavy. The tradition of weaving these 
saris is almost 800 years old, and they have been in demand for centuries from 
almost all parts of India. During the Mughal rule, this art reached its zenith 
due to the amalgamation of the Indian and Persian design and creativity. Even 
today the workers weaving these saris are predominantly Muslims. The weaving of 
saris is a household industry, with members of the family including women and 
children playing vital supporting
 roles. However during the past two decades, this art and industry have 
declined rapidly, leading to severe impoverishment of workers and their 
families to such an extent that children of these families are facing severe 
hunger and malnutrition. Yet in the face of this, attempts have been made on 
the part of the weaving community to get organized in some sort of force to 
demand justice and their rightful place and respect in the Varanasi society. 

Structure and Character of Banarasi Sari Weaving Industry
The full production process from raw material (including silk and other threads 
for embroidery) to a finished sari, includes an intricate web of many actors 
such as weavers, master weavers, raw material suppliers, designers (card 
makers), etc. It is widely believed that the whole structure is fairly feudal 
in character, where a majority of workers toil to weave the saris and a 
minority few have total control of markets, raw materials and other resources. 
These privileged few also behave as ‘masters’ and exploit the weavers to the 
fullest.
The total number of workers and families working in this trade is not known 
exactly, as there has not been any effort to carry out a thorough survey. 
However unofficial estimates by various voluntary organizations put the total 
number of workers at about 500,000, a majority of whom have received very 
little or no education. 
Banarasi saris are predominantly woven on a handloom with silk threads. The 
technology is quite ancient, and there has not been much technological 
innovation in this sector, although in the past few decades some of the weaving 
has also been done on power looms. The trade is predominantly controlled by 
‘Gaddidars’ or the traders who have the access to raw materials and the market, 
and who also sometimes own the looms. The weavers usually fall into one of two 
categories. Some are self-employed, where they own their own loom and purchase 
their own raw material, but have no access to the market and have to sell their 
produce through the trader. Even the access to raw materials is controlled by 
the traders as weavers do not have enough money to buy the raw materials in 
bulk, and thus even the independent weavers end up working for the trader. 
Alternatively, some weavers work as wage labourers at the looms owned by the 
traders. In either case the weavers
 are at the mercy of the trader for their livelihood. Weavers earn only 300 to 
400 rupees (about US$9 to US$10) on a sari that may take even 15 days to 
complete, and the traders pay the money only when the sari is sold in the 
market. Traders often point out defects in the saris either in weaving or in 
the embroidery just in order to push down the price. Faced with a desperate 
situation, the weavers often end up taking out loans or advances from the 
traders and being in a kind of bonded relationship. 

Some weavers are also members of a cooperative organization. However, the 
majority of cooperatives are controlled by the traders themselves. These 
cooperatives were set up by government to end the isolation of weavers from the 
market—on one hand providing them with easily accessible raw material, and on 
the other hand providing them with easy access to the market. However, even 
this institution has been corrupted and is under the control of the traders 
themselves who now enjoy even access to more raw materials. 
Women and Children
Women and children are exploited in this industry, yet remain invisible, and 
often unpaid. Women play an important role in all stages of sari preparation 
yet their contribution is hardly recognized. Women often spin thread, cut 
thread and do important jobs that are often considered as secondary or menial. 
The job is highly repetitive and they have to work sitting in uncomfortable 
positions for long hours sometimes even six to seven hours at once. Women are 
generally not paid directly, as they help the men in the household. If they are 
employed by the traders, they are only paid 10 to 15 rupees a day (about 
USD0.25). They are not allowed to sit on the looms as the general perception is 
that women cannot weave saris. The intense exploitation of women is subsidizing 
the whole production of banarasi saris. Their labour is adding value to the 
product yet it remains unpaid or poorly paid, and thus the cost of production 
remains low.
Children also help their family members make saris, and they also have to work 
for long hours in very tiring conditions. Children are also sometimes employed 
for ‘pattern making’ and other small jobs which help to speed up the whole 
process. Children are also sometimes forced to work to pay back loans that 
their parents or family members may have taken out.

Increasing poverty among weavers in Varanasi
A variety of reasons is given for the decline of the weaving industry since the 
1990s. Some blame mechanization. Some criticize the quality of the saris. Some 
cite other reasons like the WTO and competition from Chinese silk saris. But no 
proper initiative was taken either by state or central governments to counter 
this decline. Traders, on the contrary, have continued to make profits, without 
paying much to the weavers who have ended up in a situation of utmost poverty 
and destitution. Local media has also neglected the declining process. Over the 
course of a decade, the hand weavers’ situation has become very pitiful, and 
weavers have started committing suicide because of hunger and poverty. From 
2002 until today, about 100 weavers have committed suicide or died of hunger in 
Varanasi, and a lot are suffering from lung diseases because of silk and cotton 
fibres. Many are dying from these lung diseases, which are commonly diagnosed 
as tuberculosis.
 The children of weavers are suffering from malnutrition and they are forced to 
work for their meals. Many weavers are supplementing their meager weaving 
income with other work, such as driving cycle rickshaws.
This informal sector – characterized largely by household production units – 
has no culture of unions, or in other words they are working in a scattered way 
and have previously not come together under a common banner. The Muslim section 
of the community does have community councils, which are involved in settling 
their social problems. But these councils cannot address the problem of the 
whole weaving industry because they are religion-based, and they are not 
political forums.
In India theoretically all citizens – including informal sector workers – are 
covered by the public health system. But in practice, the public health system 
is like elephant’s teeth: only for show, not for eating. In Varanasi nobody 
gets proper benefits, unless they have political contacts or are willing to 
give bribes to get access to medical facilities in government hospitals. 
Weavers and their families suffer greatly from lack of access to medical 
treatment for common problems such as lung diseases like tuberculosis. Eighty 
per cent of weavers’ children are underweight and suffer from many diseases.
 The formation of a weavers’ union
When the People’s Vigilance Committee on Human Rights (PVCHR), a 
membership-based organization, became aware of the suicide of a weaver in 2002 
they were shocked because weavers had a reputation for relative prosperity. A 
fact-finding team visited Varanasi to find the reasons behind the suicide. 
During this fact-finding mission they interacted with the problems of weavers 
and the weaving industry. The entire mohalla Baghwanala (one of the weavers’ 
colonies) seemed like a ‘ruined forest’, meaning no-one could be heard 
laughing, and not a single face bore a smile. About 50 percent of handlooms 
were not in working condition because of lack of raw materials and no new 
orders for new saris.
PVCHR realized that without uniting weavers under a common banner they could 
not do any fruitful things for them. PVCHR called a core team together for 
discussing the weavers and their problems, and it was decided to intervene in 
their problems. Nearly 500 weavers came in contact with PVCHR and they decided 
that they were in need of a union of weavers, which would struggle to revive 
the handloom industry and lobby the government for better social security for 
weavers. Finally Bunkar Dastkaar Adhikaar Manch (BDAM, or Forum of Rights of 
Weavers and Artisans) was established in 2003 and they elected Mr. Siddique 
Hasan, a weaver, as Convener of this union.
BDAM is a membership-based union and it is facilitated by PVCHR. The work of 
BDAM has included both organizing and advocacy. BDAM uses a ‘folkway’ strategy, 
which means giving people a chance to speak about their experience in their own 
way. The role of PVCHR is organizing and documenting what people are talking 
about and how they are seeing their problems.
BDAM has three primary focus issues: right to health, right to food and revival 
of the handloom industry.
Health problems
Almost all sari workers suffer from some kind of ailment owing to the very poor 
working conditions. The looms are often in cluttered places with poor 
ventilation, and workplaces are very dusty. Weavers and their families often 
suffer from respiratory ailments from breathing in the dust and fine yarn from 
the fabric, as well as range of health ailments owing to the lack of nutritious 
food and excessive workload. Children are suffering from malnutrition.    
In light of the failure of the public health system, BDAM and PVCHR have been 
lobbying the government for improvements. In the last three years, BDAM and 
PVCHR organized people’s tribunals on three occasions, where weavers’ stories 
and opinions could be heard. PVCHR also approached the Planning Commission of 
India many times and as a result of this lobbying, the government approved a 
health insurance plan for weavers. Under this scheme, the health expenses of 
weavers and their families, including husband, wife and up to two children, are 
covered both in public as well as some designated private hospitals (capped at 
15,000 rupees, or approximately US$350, annually). This insurance scheme is 
implemented by the Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India (ICICI 
Bank). Every weaver contributes 200 rupees annually, and for every weaver an 
additional 902 rupees is contributed by the Indian Government. This is an 
achievement of PVCHR and BDAM. But
 unfortunately, like other government schemes, this also went into the jaw of 
corruption. Instead of getting benefits from it, weavers have had to struggle 
through BDAM for fair and honest implementation of the scheme. The most common 
misuse is that insurance cards of weavers were issued to some other persons who 
take benefits from the medical insurance. Meanwhile poor weavers did not get 
the insurance cards nor the health care they were promised. The formation of 
the BDAM union has helped to expose the cases of corruption and 
maladministration, and many of the weavers managed to get their insurance card 
after struggle. 
 Right to food
Due to the decline of the hand weaving industry, weavers are facing serious 
poverty and food crises. India has a Public Distribution System (PDS) – 
characteristic of its socialistic policies of the past (ironically the official 
name of India is the Socialist Republic of India). In the past, the majority of 
the public would have access to subsidized food distributed via the PDS. 
However, since the 1990s with the neoliberal reforms, much of the PDS crumbled 
to the ‘market forces’ and the ‘Ration Card’ that was issued to all families to 
access the PDS has now become more like an identification card and is used only 
for administrative purposes. However, in the case of many impoverished 
communities, the government issues special Ration Cards by which they can have 
access to subsidized food. This allows poor communities to access basic food 
stuff at very low price. Weavers are also identified in this category, and on 
paper can have access to this
 subsidized food. However, in reality it is different, because corruption in 
the PDS system ensures that the eligible weavers are not provided with the 
‘Ration Card’ and they and their families continue to suffer from hunger. 
Instead, fake Ration Cards are provided to people who do not deserve one.
BDAM is trying its best to ensure the food rights of weavers, through 
monitoring and taking steps against corruption by writing petitions and filing 
complaints. When members became aware of this corruption, they staged a 
demonstration at the district headquarters of Varanasi, with bread in their 
hands. After the demonstration, they started collecting data and stories of 
individuals who were suffering from hunger. They sent these stories to all 
relevant authorities, media persons and members of Parliament and legislative 
councils. It created a discourse in the world of intellectuals and government, 
which mobilized the government to start doing surveys and providing rations 
cards.
Struggle to preserve weavers’ culture and livelihood
If state government and central government do not come together to support the 
revival of the hand loom industry, then in the coming decade there may not be a 
single man or woman in Varanasi remaining engaged in weaving. Weaving is a 
culture and it has also been a means of livelihood for weavers for centuries. 
Weavers are artists who are making unique designs that are unmatchable, and 
there are is still no modern technology which will make saris similar to them. 
However weavers and their children are dying of hunger and those artists whose 
hands are accustomed to making antique saris are committing suicide. What kind 
of irony is this?
These weavers develop their own unique design according to their local ways, 
and likewise they developed their way of struggling, rather than following the 
way of any other trade union or political party. Why do they look very 
different while protesting, demonstrating, or giving memorandums to 
governments? After spending two years with them I realized that it is because 
of their identity as weavers. They are not Muslims, and on the other hand they 
are not Hindu either. They are weavers, and weaving is a culture. It is not a 
religion, like some other fronts of social struggle. The central issue here is 
their culture, as well as an occupation and means of livelihood. When the 
culture of weaving is dying, how will the workers doing the weaving survive? 
How a community can survive without its culture? That must be like life in a 
vacuum. It means a land of uncultured people, who have to pass the tunnel of 
civilization again, in order to be part and parcel of
 this mainstream, so-called civilized society. 


Source URL:
http://www.amrc.org.hk/alu_article/informalization_of_labour_in_asia/home_based_weavers_in_varanasi_form_a_union_in_the_str
 


DR.LENIN (ASHOKA FELLOW) & Shruti,
PVCHR, SA4/2A, DAULATPUR, VARANASI-221002,UP,INDIA.PH.:+91-542-2586688
Mobile:+91-9935599333
Please visit:
http://www.universalrights.net/heroes/display.php3?id=101
www.pvchr.org
http://lenin-shruti.blogspot.com/
www.pvchr.blogspot.com
www.sapf.blogspot.com
www.antiwto.blogspot.com
www.rtfcup.blogspot.com
www.dalitwomen.blogspot.com
 
 


      
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
 To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to