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The more one learns about this project, which has united over 3,000 artisans from various regions of India, the more astonishing it is how much rangSutra’s activities challenge many established norms. Can three thousand artisans living in different territories collaborate to ensure industrial-scale production and consistent quality? With significant reliance on manual labor, is it feasible to meet the demands of major corporations like IKEA? Can artisans prevail in an unequal struggle against the mass market? And is it possible for such an enterprise to be established and managed by just one gifted woman?
It is with her, Sumita Ghose, founder of the rangSutra project, that we have attempted to delineate this “secret mechanism” that has for nearly two decades provided artisans from diverse regions of India with employment and the opportunity for professional self-actualization.
How did the rangSutra project begin?
The idea of rangSutra came to me while on a sabbatical in 2002. At that time, I was exploring what types of organizations would be necessary in the 21st century to tackle issues of inequality and injustice. And I imagined how wonderful it would be if a project could emerge that would bridge the divide between marginalized rural communities and prospering urban India, between tradition and modernity. This vision was inspired by AMUL – the Indian Dairy Cooperative, uniting farmers throughout the country to sell milk and dairy products in India and internationally.
In 2006, we officially launched rangSutra Crafts India and started work in full swing. Our purpose is to ensure regular work and sustainable livelihoods for rural artisan communities. We build on the skills that artisans and their teams already possess, training them in the operation of modern equipment and technologies necessary for managing a 21st century enterprise – one which is equally committed to people and the planet, along with financial sustenance / profits.
RangSutra constructs a bridge connecting artisans and their creations with the handcrafted goods market, both within India and globally.