Telangana govt plans to gift Pochampally sari to Ivanka Trump
HYDERABAD: The Telangana government is planning to gift US president Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump, who will be in Hyderabad beginning Tuesday, a handloom silk sari woven in Pochampally.
Besides Ivanka, other VIP women delegates attending the Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) are also likely to get the sari as a memento from the state government.
The exquisite Ikat saris are made by weavers of Pochampally, a village in Yadadri Bhongir district, about 40km from the state capital of Hyderabad.
Officials have refused to comment on the kind of sari, its cost and other details of the gift to be given to Ivanka but weavers in Pochampally are jubilant over the promotion of their brand at the high-profile summit, where Ivanka will lead the US delegation.
“It will definitely bring a global recognition to this unique Telangana brand of sari. We are awaiting the day when she wears our sari,” Bharata Vasudev, president of Pochampally handloom weavers’ cooperative society, told the Hindustan Times.
Vasudev said the uniqueness of Pochampally is the Ikat design, also known as Patola or Chikti in local parlance.
“Unlike in other brands, where the dyeing and designing are done after the sari is woven, Ikat design adopts tying and dyeing technique,” he said.
Goverdhan, a weaver, said the Ikat design involves the transfer of intricate design and colouring onto warp and weft threads first and then weaving them together.
“The design of Pochampally saris received the Geographical Indication (GI) status for intellectual property right in 2005 after a lot of struggle,” he said.
Vasudev said the Pochampally sari was the most favourite dress of several women politicians in the country. “Former prime minister Indira Gandhi used to wear our sari regularly and so does AICC president Sonia Gandhi. In 2003, Air India ordered Pochampally saris for their cabin crew for a couple of years,” he recalled, adding, “We hope Ivanka loves our Pochampally sari.”
Apart from the gifts to the VIPs, the government has also chosen to highlight Pochampally handlooms through its volunteers.
As many as 500 volunteers, including 300 women, will wear handloom clothes made at Pochampally.
Women volunteers will wear cotton saris, while men will sport waistcoats on kurta and pyjama made of handloom clothes woven at Pochampally. These trained volunteers, mostly fashion design graduates, have been entrusted with the task of receiving delegates at the airport, coordinating their summit participation and guiding them to various tourist spots. “Alternatively, we have also supplied around 200 handloom cotton saris of Gollabhama design made at Sircilla for the sake of volunteers,” a handlooms and textiles department official said.