Arts and Culture
Tools
Typography
  • Smaller Small Medium Big Bigger
  • Default Helvetica Segoe Georgia Times

Tibet-Handcrafts-Dharamshala-India-2016Mcleodganj — Preserving the Tibetan ancient and traditional crafts faces challenge for the Tibetan Handicraft Co-operative Society Ltd (THC), they told the Tibet Post International (TPI) that they are calling for young Tibetans to join them, providing free training, accommodation, and later job opportunity. But the response has been "disappointing."

Tibetan women appear dressed in the traditional Tibetan attire, chuba and sat in front of vertical looms tying ties over a rod, from which spilled threads of wool like streams of colours, at the handcraft centre wich is located near the Dolma Chowk in Mcleodganj, Himachal Pradesh, India.

These threads flowed into boxes, resting behind the women, where they were gracefully arranged into colourful bales. In the adjacent room, a pretty store selling Tibetan artefacts, a few visitors were enquiring about the handmade carpets that these women were weaving.

"This co-operative was started with the Dalai Lama's blessings in 1963 to preserve the ancient craft of Tibetan carpet weaving," Tamding Tsering (Production manager ) tells to TPI, who has been with the cooperative since 1972.

"In 1959, the year of the Tibetan Uprising, when the Chinese took control, thousands of Tibetans followed the young Dalai Lama's flight to Dharamsala in India through the Himalayas." He share with TPI that his family was one amongst them and that he was still a child when he came to India (Sikkim). "I grew up here and joined the co-operative as an employee, learnt carpet weaving in 1976, and in 1983, I was promoted to the position of a carpet teacher. And since 1992, I have been acting as the production manager."

This centre and carpet weaving, he told , they have been creating jobs for refugees who arrive from Tibet as well as for those Tibetans like him who have grown up in exile. The society also provides accommodation and assistance with children education; pension plan for the retired workers; co-ordinates madicare; and takes care of workers and funeral expenses.

The society provides 3 months winter holidays and helps give loans to share holders, who are sweter sellers and and need to travel down to the plains of India to ell ?hundreds of woolen sweaters in various towns and street stalls. It has also been contributing to the Tibetan Government in Exile, he said, which is located a little down the road.

''An ancient and traditional craft, carpets have been an intrinsic part of Tibetan culture '' Tamding Tsering (Production manager ) tells to TPI, where they have been used for a myriad of purposes: Sleeping, sitting, as horse saddles, wall hanging, flooring etc.

Another teacher, Dawa Dolma, sitting beside a fellow weaver, where they were working on the same carpet on a loom, told to TPI that the technique used in their weaving was unique. "We still use the archaic vertical loom and double knots''.

You won't find any other weaving tradition using the double knot. These knots," she said beating at them with a wooden hammer, "Are tied over a rod. When a row of knots is done, we cut the pile and slip out the rod." When the rod is out, what remains is an emerging pattern on a flat vertical surface.

TPI pointed at the graphs that show rolled and hanging from all the looms, to which the weavers kept referring in the middle of weaving. "These graphs carry the designs of the carpets," Dawa told the TPI, "And they are prepared by our arts section upstairs.

The patterns that are used for the carpets are traditional Tibetan motifs: animal, floral and symbolic representations; but the colours of these patterns can change as per orders received from our customers."

Tamding Tsering told the TPI that there are about 63 weavers with the co-operative today. "We have three places here in Mcleodganj apart from this centre where these carpets are being produced." And that most of the weavers had come from Tibet as children, and have learnt the craft here.

Dawa had learnt the craft in Nepal, where her family fled for exile. Incidentally, she told me, though carpet weaving still exists in Tibet, most of the work for its preservation has been done in India and Nepal. Over the years, in fact, these two countries have produced more Tibetan carpets than Tibet.

A young man called Tsering, who helps Tamding Tsering look after the production of carpets, revealed, "We export 85 per cent of our carpets, which are mostly sent to the US, Canada, Belgium, France and Japan. And we have a loyal clientele. We are the only ones in McLeod Ganj making these handmade Tibetan carpets since 1963."

Speaking about the longevity of these carpets, he said, "The best thing about Tibetan carpets is the quality: They last long. One carpet lasts for at least 40 years. For instance, the ones at my home were made by my parents about half a century ago; but they still look good. So I say Tibetan carpets last a lifetime. They are washable, but should be dried well."

TPI further learnt from him that the centre trains youngsters in this art. "We advertise in the newspapers calling for young people interested in this craft to trained with us. We provide them free training, give them free accommodation, and also pay them for their work. But the response has been disappointing." Tamding Tsering added, "With time, the weavers are becoming less in number. The new generation is not taking an interest in the art. Probably because it involves a lot of hard work."