Monday 29 April 2013

Artisans' stories


Life in the remote villages is very dull and gray. The only colours that brighten the villager's lives are found in their clothing and their embroidery. The designs and colours the women use are a traditional part of their culture and an expression of their love for beauty.

We either work directly with local artisans through the assistance of a local coordinator or work with a local cooperative that supports the artisans mainly in:
  • South-western China
  • Northern Thailand
  • Borneo region
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South-western China

The disabled (Deaf)

The majority of disabled (deaf) young people in villages are unemployed and many turned to Deaf-led gangs for a sense of belonging. Their means of living comes from petty theft or worse, from drug trade and prostitution.
 
We work with a local cooperative named Hearts And Hands that provide training and employment for these disabled people by teaching them to sew and produce handicrafts. All the artisans are ladies with hearing disability, they learn useful life skills in a friendly and safe working environment.


Some of the artisans are uneducated but had participated as adults in some programs in Sign Language, Life Skills and vocational skills within the organisation Project Grace. Many of them do not have proper education although they have learned basic sewing skills. At this time there are about 20 over artisans and it is our hope to continue to support and assist them to expand so that more disable people in the local community can be trained and employed to be self-sufficiency.


The poor and needy tribal villagers

Yi minority tribe women - Here are just some of their stories:

Lydia is a single mother of two. She had been unable to make ends meet and her children, aged 8 and 10, were not able to go to school because she could not afford the fees. Buying her handicrafts helps her put her children through school and ensure there is food on the table.

Our support has helped her gain some financial independence and a new hope in life.
She now plans to start her own business and is saving towards that. She aspires to help others who are in the same condition as herself.

Liu lost her right leg due to tumour, after suffering for about 20 years. A charity funded the amputation and a prosthesis was fitted on her. Unable to do heavy farm work she was shunned by her family because she was considered useless. They married her off to a mentally subnormal man and they now live in a dark small room in a house belonging to her in laws.
 
Our support has helped her gain some financial independence and as a result, her family does not look down on her anymore.
She now has a dream to build her own house from these handicraft proceeds.
We aim to provide assistance to Liu and nurture her to reach out to help others in the same plight in her community.
 
Xiao Chang and her family are farmers. The crops they plant are enough just to feed themselves. Their pigs are critical because during the Spring Festival, they are slaughtered, eaten to celebrate the New Year, and the remainder salted and kept as food for the whole year. Extras are sold for cash and used to pay for school fees, buy cooking oil, other essential groceries as well as manure for the farm.
One year, Xiao Chang's family lost their entire pig brood to an infectious disease. Our support has assisted her family through a difficult time and get back onto their feet again.

Northern Thailand

The tribal village girls

We support and work with a local pastor and his wife Sayan Kusavadee and Siriporn that turned their home into three shelters for 140 underprivileged girls. The project began in 1987 with the help from some other foreign NGO, it was aim in proving a shelter home for tribal girls who were being sold or lured into prostitution.


It first started with only one home, which provides full board and medical care for about 90 girls. They are sent to nearby public schools for education and are given basic vocational training such as sewing to prepare them for employment later when they leave the house. Without education and skills, many of these girls would very likely be sold into prostitution.

After receiving education and trained with skills, many of these tribal girls are able to go back to their own village to save more girls, bringing help and hope to the otherwise helpless villagers living in poverty. This also brings a sense of security and confidence to these village tribal girls.

     

Artisans with AIDS, the deaf, and the elderly in the village

They are trained by local cooperative to make needlecrafts to generate income to support themselves and their family.

This project started in 2006 and it has a group of 4 men and 12 women.

They are especially trained to make soft animals and dolls.
Niluborn is a young girl, gifted in needlecrafts, she and her sister, Worapong as well as her parents have been trained to sew and make handicrafts particularly in soft animals and dolls.  They were living in poverty and were marginalized as factory workers in the past until they started making handicrafts where we have been supporting them to ensure sustainability in economic sufficiency in the long run.

Borneo Region

Crafts of Hearts n Hands work closely with various local cooperatives and agencies in Borneo that was set up in promoting Borneo crafts made by the indigenous people in Borneo region in order to help raise their standards of living. We operate under the principle of fair trade: the main goal is to pay the producers the fair price that is just and adequate to meet expenses with the main goal of improving the livelihood of tribal people in Borneo region. 



The handicrafts made by the local artisans living in various villages are collected regularly by the village leader on a regular basis. Some of them are still living in remote area of Borneo Dayak Long House.
The richness in material, colours and design of the local crafts reflect various artisans’ tribal tradition and culture. The finished prod­ucts can take the forms of weaved textiles, baskets, bead work, wood carvings, and handcrafted jewelleries and musical instruments.
Borneo handicraft is largely a traditional practice, handed down from generation to generation. In the olden days, baskets, jars and wooden chests weaved and carved by the indigenous women with materials collected from the rich rainforests are utilitar­ian – used for the storage of goods.
There is  an increasing shortage of active skilled crafts people as the current ones are ageing with fewer younger generation to carry on the tradition, so traditional handmade crafts is an industry fighting to survive at this time and age.
 
 
Various indigenous tribes that are still living in the deep jungle of Borneo island include: Iban, Dayak, Orang Ulu, Kelabit, Punan, and Melanau. 
Most of them in the jungle are living in the longhouses. Longhouse is the traditional dwelling place of the native peoples of Borneo. A longhouse is like a single floor apartment building on stilts. Each family gets a room and the whole village shares a longhouse.
Ina grew up in a poor and dysfunctional family where she had very little educational opportunity. 
  
She was married to an older man at a very young age and is now a mother of three young children. She lives in a remote village of Borneo.  She was taught sewing skill by Francisca (one of my friends who supports fair trade in Borneo) two years ago to make handicrafts that will enable her to earn a living and support her family.
Living Waters Village

In the middle of 2010, Crafts of Hearts n Hands began to sponsor ten children under the project started by Ronny Heyboer & family that rescue abandoned or neglected children in the remote jungle of west Kalimantan, Borneo.






 

Most of these children are orphans. Some have been abused and some have had a loving upbringing but are located in extremely poor living condition. All of them are originated from tribes that are heavily influenced by witchdoctors who control and manipulate their people and put great fear into their lives. In this project, the children are lovingly cared for with food, accomodation and education. Find out more at www.heyboer.org                                                    
 

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