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The Lakiya Negev Weaving Project
Published in This Week in Palestine Issue no. 109
May 2007
http://www.thisweekinpalestine.com/details.php?id=2135&ed=140&edid=140
On April 26th, 2007, more than
50 Bedouin women from different families and localities in the Naqab gathered
for their annual meeting in the cool spacious hand-woven tent behind Sidreh’s
offices in the village of Lakiya. The women are all members in the Lakiya Negev
Weaving Project. They had come together to discuss the pros and cons of their
ongoing work in the project. Some are weavers, others spinners, finishers,
dyers, administrative staff, saleswomen and, most recently, tour
guides.
Since 1992, women working with Lakiya have been making their own
special contribution to combat some of the overwhelming problems faced by the
Bedouins in the Naqab. Bedouins are the indigenous people making up 25% of the
population of the area but holding only 2% of its land. Half of the 160,000
Naqab Bedouins live in seven recognized villages and half live in 45
unrecognized villages. The recognized villages were set up according to a
government plan to resettle Bedouins in "townships." The unrecognized villages
existed way before 1948 but the Israeli government refuses to recognize them.
These villages do not appear on any map and they lack basic infrastructure.
Their inhabitants are denied basic services such as running water, sewage
systems, electricity, phones lines, proper education, health services and access
roads.
The Naqab Bedouins are in dire socio-economic circumstances. They
are the poorest population in the country, have the highest rate of
unemployment, the highest rate of child mortality, and the lowest rate of
academic achievement. Bedouin women and children are the most marginalized: 47%
of the women do not visit a doctor when in need, 47% are anaemic and 53% suffer
from urinary tract infections. The women’s unemployment rate reaches 85% and in
the unrecognized villages it is over 90%. It is here that the women of Lakiya
are making a small but significant difference. With the support of Oxfam GB, the
Welfare Association and others, Sidreh manages Lakiya as one of
its programmes. Sidreh is a grassroots non-profit Arab Bedouin women’s
organization aiming at improving the status of Bedouin women throughout the
Naqab, to empower them personally, socially and economically. In addition to
Lakiya, Sidreh manages a Bedouin hospitality programme, adult education
including literacy in both Arabic and Hebrew, health education, social
development and youth leadership.
Lakiya and other Sidreh programmes go
some way in re-establishing the status of Bedouin women which was lost after
1948. Until then, women had been central to the community’s lifestyle. Their
skilled labour in terms of herding, harvesting, weaving and home keeping,
including fetching water and firewood, had been the cornerstone of Bedouin life,
ensuring that women were influential members of society. After 1948, this
lifestyle has disappeared with the confiscation of grazing lands and enforced
abandonment of traditional ways. Women have become marginalized and many of
their skills are no longer appropriate. As a result, women have lost their
financial independence, influence, status and self esteem. Bedouin women have
found it impossible to re-establish themselves in Israel’s ‘new’ society as
those over 30 have an illiteracy rate of 80%, in some villages more than 70% of
young girls drop out of school, and the Bedouin traditional patriarchal society
allows polygamy, teenage marriages and domestic violence.
Historically,
most Bedouin women were spinners and weavers and ensured that skills were passed
from mother to daughter. Traditionally, women wove the family homes (waterproof
tents from black goat wool), carpets, saddle bags, cushions, grain sacks and
other essentials. Each tribe would have its own distinctive designs and one
gauge of both tribal and individual family wealth was the number of decorative
and functional weavings it owned. Women in the tribe known to be especially
talented acquired social status from their work, giving them a deep sense of
pride and achievement. Loom-setters, who were often also the local midwife and
herbalist, were particularly valued and respected.
Traditional Bedouin
weaving is hand-woven on ground looms with distinguished linear designs in red,
blue, green, black and white. In addition, Lakiya has introduced complementary
designs using rustic and pastel colours to create a range evoking refinement,
beauty and originality. Hand spun yarn made with drop spindles from pure local
Awassi sheep wool is dyed and plied ready for a group of skilled women to set on
a loom created from tent pegs and pieces of wood. The tight warp faced weaving
created on these rudimentary frames is both elegant and durable. Colours and
yarn strength are ensured by fast dyes combined with mothproofing.
Lakiya
has helped to re-establish the value of weaving skills and preserve traditional
spinning and weaving as a positive part of community identity whilst creating an
income generating opportunity for women.
According to an external
evaluation by Oxfam GB at the project’s tenth year of operation, Lakiya has had
a major impact on women, their families and communities. The first Bedouin woman
to get a driving license was someone working in the project. Illiterate women
were encouraged to acquire reading and writing skills, widen their scope of
knowledge and expand their horizons. The need for teamwork, especially for
loom-setting, helped to rebuild women’s social networks. Perhaps most
importantly it raised their self confidence, self esteem and social status. As
well as using income for general family needs, many women were determined to use
it so that their daughters would have better futures. They invested in education
fees and now the daughters of the women involved in the project are working as
teachers, nurses and even one young woman is currently studying law.
The
sustainability of Lakiya is still not assured as it is still dependent on
external funds. Sales are state-sensitive and went down during the first
Intifada, flourished during the Palestinian-Israeli peace process but froze
again due to the deep recession, the second Intifada and the recent second war
against Lebanon.
Recently, Sidreh has been happy to share the unique
experience of Bedouin weaving through its tourism programme. The Bedouin
hospitality tent hosts groups and individual visitors from the country and
abroad, offering them a rare insight into the Bedouin world with weaving crafts
demonstrated, quality products exhibited to view or buy and succulent cuisine.
Special events, activity days, seminars and workshops are accommodated. Future
plans are for Sidreh to establish a Bedouin cultural centre based on Lakiya. The
centre will have a conference hall, motel and many traditional attractions for
tourists-weaving crafts, embroidery, camel riding, Bedouin cuisine, herbal
cosmetics and treatments.
Lakiya’s high quality products are sold
directly from its showroom, at Sunbula in Jerusalem and from its website.
Home-sales are popular. Products include carpets, runners, cushions, wall
hangings, handbags, pouches and belts. The products are exhibited in an elegant
hard copy catalogue and on the project’s website www.lakiya.org, besides other
websites http://picasaweb.google.com/lakiyaweaving
and at www.bedouinweaving.com.
International outlets include Catherine Lewis and Prudence Thorner in the
USA, Marie Massenet in France and Marianne Högstedt in Switzerland.
Unfortunately, due to the Arab-Israeli conflict, access to markets in the Arab
countries is denied. Products can be customized to size and design using a
palette of 32 colours. Delivery locally and abroad is available. Lakiya’s
showroom, guest tent and the Sidreh offices are located in the village of Lakiya
on the route to the Dead Sea, about one and a half hours from Jerusalem.
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