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January
23, 2000
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Dagger
Drawn
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NINA
PILLAI
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Speaking
Up For Shahtoosh
I believe that
if shahtoosh is banned, our master weavers in Kashmir will lose
the trade of generations becaues of the white woman's avariciousnes.
An entire community will be wiped out because the ultra glam women
of Begravia and Hamptons couldn't get enough.
Since July,
the US Fish and Wildlife Service have subpoenaed the ultra-rich,
ultra-thin icons of the State of New York to hand in all the shahtoosh
shawls in their possession. Like schoolgirls, most handed over a
near fortune spent on this coveted 'pass through a ring' shawl,
while moaning and whingening in private about yet others who had
one in every colour under the sun - Valentino, the designer, being
the latter. Their booty was collected in clear plastic bags with
'evidence' stuck across it.
It bodies ill
for these denizens of New York's A list, as the allegations of endangering
the chiru antelope pale in comparison with the swap of poached tiger
bones at the China-India border near Tibet. That the shahtoosh endangers
our dwindling tiger population make one sit up in shock. I have
not bought a shahtoosh shawl in close to 10 years, but I do own
a few which I love more for sentimental value than for a fashion
statement.
That the antelopes
grazed on thorny grasslands where the wool was later harvested was
the common opinion of most women in the know. Now the women in the
facts coming to light show that chiru antelopes are being massacred
en masse and part of the exchange is a packet of tiger bones valued
in Chinese medicine. The shawl in India is still a creamy layer,
a deluxe object - at Rs 20,000 a throw it has to be - but in the
US the same shawl costs between $2,000 and $15,000. So who is really
profiteering from these unscrupulous mark-ups to create a morbid
competitive, I want more tush, greed there? These go-betweens are
the ones making handsome profits but paying a pittance in comparison
back home.
I truly believe
that if shahtoosh is banned totally, our master weavers in Kashmir
will lose the trade of generations because of the white woman's
avariciousnes. An entire community will be wiped out because the
ultra glam women of Belgravia and HAmptons couldn't get enough.
Though the selling
of shahtoosh has been controversial even in India, the Chief Minister
of Kashmir, Farooq Abdullah, has vociferously campaigned for the
weavers and embroiders, the artisans of the trade so that a tradition
carriers on. If demand and supply could be kept in check and farming
of the animals started with shearings done annually, then perhaps
a reasonable demand can be met and the fashion statement of a prized
shawl met, with no adverse effect on the chiru population.
Till then, we
must thank the US wildlife wardens for their relentless raids to
track down the middlemen who barter away the trade of a proud Kashmir
race.
That the shahtoosh
wool fibre is almost seven times thinner than human hair and that
it is the finest cashmere is a fact. That we have master weavers
who can weave the shahtoosh is also a fact. To take away their livelihood
seems cruel. It may seem prohibitive to levy a fine of $25,000 on
a person for selling shahtoosh and a five-year sentence or $50,000
and jail for companies that violate the ban, but till the balance
is restored, 200 and 300 shawls per person does deserve punishment,
as a Valentino perhaps does. The word scapegoat comes to mind, but
in the final analysis, shahtoosh was nothing more than the flavour
of the year. And gifted weaver, who will be made the ultimate scapegoat,
and to me therein lies the ultimate tragedy.
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