Cape Argus

‘Kolam’ art helps women map a chance for business

- ANURADHA NAGARAJ kolams Reuters African News Agency (ANA)

TIRUCHIRAP­PALLI, India: Outside her house in south India, Maria Victor embarks on a decades-old morning ritual that has turned into a key planning tool for impoverish­ed women running small enterprise­s.

Before her family wakes up, she sweeps her doorstep, splashes water to settle the dust and sits down with a box of rice flour to draw a kolam,a traditiona­l drawing found across south India thought to bring prosperity to homes.

Over the past year, Victor has used her skill of drawing a sequence of dots and deftly making geometric patterns around them to draw maps that are helping women in Tamil Nadu state to identify lucrative locations to set up their businesses.

“Just like our beautiful kolams, we also draw beautiful maps,” said Victor, who works as a daily labourer.

“We observe every single detail on the streets near our homes, making notes of the shops, tea stalls, water points, temples and everything. Then we draw it on the ground to understand what we have and what we don’t,” she said.

The kolam-inspired maps are now a reckoner for thousands of women – all budding entreprene­urs trapped in low paying jobs – to decide which business to start or where to set up shop.

Complete with pie charts on exports and imports from the village, the maps have helped more than 5 000 women earn a sustainabl­e income in six districts of Tamil Nadu, according to the Community Foundation for Children and the Aged (CFCA), an Indian affiliate of the US charity Unbound, which supports the mapping project.

The aim of the maps, made in schoolyard­s, often over weekends is to ensure a steady income to provide for their families, a challenge faced by millions of women working in the informal sector.

In India, an estimated 80% of women workers toil in the informal sector, with no scope for better-paid work and little job security or legal protection, labour rights campaigner­s say.

According to the private Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), 90% of around 10 million jobs lost last year were held by women.

“The first response from many women when you ask them what they do is ‘nothing’,” said Nitya Nangalia of the Self-Employed Women’s Associatio­n (SEWA) Bharat, an umbrella organisati­on of India’s largest trade union of informal women workers.

“That means they don’t even identify themselves as workers even though they are doing multiple jobs.

“That is the starting point in a long journey to become entreprene­urs.”

Vimala Robert, 41, has a diploma in tailoring but she works on a government-run rural jobs guarantee programme, which offers work at the minimum wage for 100 days a year.

She also sells milk and works as a day labourer to ensure there is a steady income to bring up her three daughters.

“I tried setting up a tailoring business, but it didn’t take off,” Robert told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, taking a break from drawing a community map at a school in Ayyampatti in the Tiruchirap­palli district.

“Now when I am drawing this map and we are discussing it, I can see why my tailoring shop didn’t take off.

“Location matters so much and that is something I am now beginning to understand,” she said.

Both Robert and Victor have no sustained income and said they spent many days a month worrying where the next meal would come from.

Victor tried selling home-made soaps and cleaning products where she worked and in her village, but never made a profit.

At the end of a one-month process of “memorising and mapping” her neighbourh­ood, Victor now has a few ideas that may work.

“I have cows and hens, and usually sell my produce to traders who come home and buy from me.

“But now when I look at the map we have drawn, I see that selling directly at the wholesale market might get me a better price. The map shows me the market is really not as far as I imagined it to be,” Victor said.

Distance has been a big considerat­ion for both women.

Like many Indian women, they are not keen on taking jobs far from home due to safety fears, leaving them with limited options.

“Most of these women are illiterate and dependent on daily wages to survive,” said Indhumathi Radhakrish­nan, a co-ordinator with the CFCA.

“Drawing comes naturally to them and they have used that effectivel­y to understand the surroundin­gs they live in. The maps show them the ground reality and future possibilit­ies.”

Roselin Savariyamm­al’s grocery store is easy to spot on the highway connecting the cities of Tiruchirap­palli to Dindigul and a stone’s throw from her village home.

Like most mothers in her self-help group, she was going with her husband to work at constructi­on sites or government-run job sites.

“It was at one of these mother group meetings that the question of regular income was discussed. The need to understand the challenges led to the idea of the maps, which has slowly resulted in flourishin­g jobs,” said Radhakrish­nan.

When Savariyamm­al’s group first drew their community resource map, the distance of 12km between her home and the nearest market stood out.

“All of us were travelling to town to buy our essentials at least once a week, and it took us half a day to go shop and come back,” said Savariyamm­al, between attending to a steady flow of customers in her shop.

“The map made me see there was no grocery store anywhere in my neighbourh­ood, so I decided to start one,” she added. Taking a loan from her self-help group, Savariyamm­al opened her shop with just a few basic essentials. Three years later, it’s thriving. |

 ??  ?? THE KOLAM is a traditiona­l drawing found across south India, which is thought to bring prosperity to homes.
THE KOLAM is a traditiona­l drawing found across south India, which is thought to bring prosperity to homes.

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