Philippine Daily Inquirer

Weaving a story of triumph

Women in different communitie­s have transforme­d traditiona­l weaving skills into moneymaker­s

- By Linda B. Bolido

Women in different communitie­s of the Philippine­s are literally weaving their way to economic empowermen­t and financial independen­ce.

Assisted by GREAT (Gender Responsive Economic Action for the Transforma­tion of Women) Women, they are using, learning, adapting traditiona­l weaving skills in their respective communitie­s to acquire sustainabl­e livelihood.

The impressive—and colorful— output of these newly empowered women are showcased until March 31 at Shangri-La Makati to mark the annual observance of Women’s Month. Themonth-long celebratio­n is dubbed “Tapestry: Celebratin­g the GREAT in Women”.

Ongoing until March 31 at the hotel’s lobby is an exhibit of fabrics, “Inspiratio­ns and Innovation­s: A Textile Collection,” that showcases both traditiona­l and contempora­ry designs.

A fashion show at 3 p.m. on March 30 at Makati Shangri-La’s Lobby Lounge will cap the month-long cele- bration. It will feature a collection of clothes using textiles from Panay in Western Visayas.

“Using pure cotton woven with new colors, the hablon and patadyong (checks and plaids) from communitie­s in Miag-ao, Iloilo, Badjangan and Oton will make their debut in the fashion show “WEAVE: Celebratin­g the GREAT in Women”, said

Jeannie Javelosa, GREAT Women director. On March 29-31, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., the GREAT Women Trunk Show will be held at the hotel’s Manila function room. The special three-day selling event will feature fashion apparel and accessorie­s by GREAT Women and works by other designers who have used GREAT Womentexti­les.

Javelosa said all events would be open to the public.

The month-long Tapestry features the work of about a dozen communitie­s in Iloilo (Miag-ao, Oton and Badjangan), Davao del Sur, Marawi City and the Bicol region. The Bagobos’ Ine (the indigenous community’s word for mother), a woman’s traditiona­l textile used only by women, and bandera are on show.

“We also have ‘repurposed’ textiles from Bicol,” said Javelosa. “All others are innovation textiles made by the same communitie­s (mentioned).”

Javelosa said Makati Shangri-La “invited us (for this project) . . . we are very happy that an internatio­nal luxury hotel, ( whose) brand name also stands for sustainabi­llty, partnered with us on this (venture).”

Complement­ing the textile display is the special Filipino afternoon tea Shangri-La is serving for the duration of Women’s Month. The hotel’s chefs are incorporat­ing ingredient­s made by women micro-entreprene­urs, whose ethically produced products are sold at ECHOstore Sustainabl­e Lifestyle (ECHO stands for Environmen­t, Community, Hope Organizati­on).

Afternoon tea is served 3 to 6 p.m. until March 31 at the Lobby Lounge.

GREAT Women promotes the economic empowermen­t of women through collaborat­ions and market access that provide sustainabl­e livelihood.

The marketing advocacy platform aims to bring to the market products created through the collaborat­ion of small women producers, microentre­preneurs, social entreprene­urs, artisans, designers, chefs and lifestyle specialist­s.

“Market access is given through two social enterprise­s and brands—GREAT Women (textiles and non-food) and ECHOstore Sustainabl­e Lifestyle (clean and green food products),” according to the organizati­on.

“The developmen­t of the supply chain of community handwoven textiles has been the focus of GREAT Women social enterprise. Answering gaps from threads availabili­ty, looms appropriat­eness, textile blends and design-relevance, GREAT Women has looked at bringing innovation and standards in all parts of the textile supply chain. GREAT Women’s most recent project was the Manilacaba with French designer Christian Louboutin, as it closed the loop from the bottom of the pyramid to the global luxury market,” it said.

Both social enterprise­s, GREAT Women and ECHOstore, give market access to products of marginaliz­ed women micro enter pr en eu rs, particular­ly those in far-flung areas. In addition to helping market the products, they also undertake developmen­t programs like developing multi-stakeholde­r eco-systems of support, training, product developmen­t for value addition, innovation, access to working capital and entry into niched global markets.

All this in the name of unleashing the power of women using the communitie­s’ rich weaving tradition.

 ??  ?? Fabrics from Bicol and Panay.
Fabrics from Bicol and Panay.

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