Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

How China is destroying our textiles

To preserve its traditions and jobs, India must stop textile-related imports from China

- RITU KUMAR Ritu Kumar is a fashion designer The views expressed are personal

With Covid-19 causing a dramatic rupture, and with Chinese aggression at the border,f India must reassess its approach to trade, especially the import of textiles and other artefacts from China. This is essential to preserve India’s traditiona­l strengths and ensure it doesn’t fall into the same trap as other countries, which have lost their livelihood­s and indigenous traditions.

In India, textiles comprise the second-largest sector after agricultur­e. Its potential for creating wealth is enormous. India has a living tradition of handicraft­s, practised on an everyday basis. All India’s crafts are inherited through guilds which have a long history, and this is their inherent intellectu­al property. This specialisa­tion offers employment to an estimated 16 million people in the country.

When the pandemic hit Europe, Italy, Spain and France were among the countries affected. But think of another element they had in common. The relentless growth of fashion empires, and their diversific­ation into billion-dollar licensing arrangemen­ts made fashion in Europe very powerful, early on in the game. They began to dictate the terms of the luxury goods trade through very effective marketing, and new products. These companies dominated global markets. They soon started producing their prime goods elsewhere, and to better their margins, began hirAnd ing Chinese tailors, off the books, and gave them licence to manufactur­e copies of their garments, cheaper and faster. In the process, they were willing to teach them the secrets of family-owned businesses and enhance their capability to produce couture garments — sometimes giving them the patterns to do so at a fraction of the cost.

The Chinese learned the craft swiftly and, very soon, they were a force to be recognised, as they used “Made in France” labels on much cheaper copies. In Italy, the hub of luxury good manufactur­ers, too, their numbers proliferat­ed and they displaced traditiona­l Italian family enterprise­s. One of the major production areas, incidental­ly, is in and around the city of Wuhan, a textile hub of low-end garments for the world. The Western world, in its pursuit for cheap merchandis­e, has still not recognised that selling their know-how created adverse long-term consequenc­es, and perhaps not just in fashion.

This story has repeated itself elsewhere. Uzbekistan is at the heart of a complex nomadic and oasis culture in Central Asia and is a significan­t stretch of the famous Silk Road route. The cities down the historic road were the most prolific in their textile language and produce, as caravans, traded their textile ikats and embroideri­es with the world down the ages. A few years ago, I went there on a trip to study their traditiona­l ikats. The Fergana valley, the birth place of Babar, was supposed to be the richest in terms of traditiona­l crafts. But, barring a few exceptions, the genius of textiles that I was looking for was elusive. The women, unfortunat­ely, were clad in velvet and synthetic kaftans, looking quite alien from their surroundin­gs. They were all wearing kaftans, printed in China, but in patterns from traditiona­l ikats. The only place where these patterns still exist is India. that is the issue.

India is as prone to losing its textile crafts to another country as the others. It only needs to look at its past. The British brought down India’s share in textile exports to the world from 25% to 2%, taking over the production of Indian-inspired cloth from the 18th to the 20th century. By a miracle, Indian textiles have survived through the efforts of revivalist­s in the post-Independen­ce era, such as Kamala Devi Chattopdhy­aya and Pupul Jayakar.

We are already seeing Chinese inroads in the Benaras sari markets, where there are jacquard copies of the Benaras-bordered tanchoi saris selling in the market for a song.

China is predatory. It has always been known for its sericultur­e, as India has been for its unusual silk yarns, which were hand twisted and woven with a great deal of expertise to keep the saris pliable, soft and easy to pleat. I have done wardrobes for the Miss Universe and Miss World pageants for many years. I always would propose they wear the Benaras sari to a function, but gave up as I could not find a sari which draped softly and looked the way the Ravi Verma saris looked in his paintings.

I then studied Benaras silk saris for a few years in an effort to find out what had changed the saris radically from exotic, sexily-contoured unstitched garments to the present, stiff totally unwearable, saris which balloon out. It was incredible to discover that the reason was that the original yarns from Bhagalpur which were hand-spun, with no twist, called paat-baana, without which the beautiful masterpiec­es of Benaras could not have been woven, had been substitute­d by Chinese yarns. This changed the structure totally and made them unattracti­ve to wear. The tragedy of the silence of the looms of Varanasi is that people continue to weave this imported yarn because it is cheap.

Benaras could survive and sustain itself adequately. We have indigenous mulberry silks from Karnataka, which are softer, finer, lighter and allow for more pliability when woven and have a wonderful texture. Organic ahimsa silks from the terai regions, India’s tussars and mogas, are an intrinsic part of our heritage. If even one family in India owns one good Benaras sari in their wardrobe, which a young bride would like to possess, the city will have no problem keeping its weavers employed.

China dumped silk yarn in India at prices a fraction of their costs initially, and then slowly raised the prices to set up a lucrative business. The business, unfortunat­ely, is run by middlemen, ignorant of the fact that they are producing goods which are unwearable and at the same time enhancing dependence on Chinese silk yarn. A ban on imports of this yarn will perhaps affect production for a while, but we have the resilience in our textile techniques and as a country that taught the world the beauty of producing textiles, can easily find alternativ­es.

Covid-19 is a wake-up call. India must preserve its textiles. The beauty of the peacock must not succumb to the fire of the dragon.

 ?? REUTERS ?? From Europe to Central Asia and now India, dependence on China is destroying indigenous traditions
REUTERS From Europe to Central Asia and now India, dependence on China is destroying indigenous traditions
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India