By Athar Parvaiz
Asia Times Online
SRINAGAR - After scientists in
Kashmir successfully cloned the pashmina goat, that produces the famous
"cashmere" wool, hopes are running high for the revival of the
traditional shawl-making industry in this Indian state.
Noori, a cloned pashmina goat, at
Srinagar's Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agriculture Science and Technology (SKUAST), born on
March 9, is being seen as just the breakthrough for which the ailing cashmere
shawl industry has been looking.
"Noori is the first cloned
Pashmina goat in the world and she represents a major breakthrough for
us," said Professor Riaz Ahmad Shah at SKUAST's center of animal
biotechnology and head of the World Bank-funded cloning project. Shah and his
team at SKUAST used a simple method involving little more than a microscope and
petri dish to produce Noori and the method, now standardized, can readily be
replicated through the valley.
Shah told Inter Press Service (IPS)
that cloning would not only help increase the number of pashmina goats but also
"result in development of animals that can produce finer wool than that
from the naturally existing Plasmin goat".
Rafiq Shah, a Srinagar trader, says,
"There is no match anywhere in the world for the handspun, tightly-woven
pashmina shawl, although duplicates are steadily being pushed into the market
with lower price tags."
A greater threat to the cashmere
wool industry is the dwindling herds of the delicate pashmina goat, which must
be carefully reared in the cold and windy Himalayas to stimulate growth of the
fine wool on its underbelly.
"Just imagine the kind of
impact that commercially multiplying pashmina goats through cloning would have
on the shawl industry," says Gouhar Rather, a handicrafts dealer in
Srinagar. "It will certainly help genuine pashmina makers."
At least 15,000 families are
associated with the pashmina shawl industry in Kashmir with the women closely
involved in the spinning of the wool while the men lend a hand with plying the
heavy handlooms.
Cashmere shawl sales bring in about
US$85 million a year and, along with tourism, represents a major source of
income for the seven million people of the Kashmir Valley.
"Manufacturers in Amritsar and
Ludhiana [major woollen goods centers in Punjab state] now import wool from New
Zealand and Australia, spin it on machines and treat them with chemicals before
passing off second-rate products as pashmina," says Rafiq Shah.
According to Shah, in the past,
manufacturers in China and other countries had tried to produce cashmere shawls
and failed. "It is not easy to spin pashmina the way our women
do."
The making of pashmina shawls,
essentially a cottage industry, has long been considered an ideal way for
Kashmir's Muslim women to be gainfully employed without having to step out of
their homes.
But there are Kashmiri women like
Shameema Wani, 42, who have graduated to the marketing of pashmina shawls. She
provides work for some 2,000 women, collecting their products for sale at an
outlet she set up in the heart of Srinagar about 10 years ago.
"This is a job that is suitable
for women because it allows them to attend to household chores and also earn an
income," Wani said while welcoming the scientific developments that
promise more raw material for shawl-making.
The technology developed at SKUAST
can easily be extended to other commercially valuable species in the Himalayas,
notably the chiru, or Tibetan antelope which produces shahtoosh, a type of wool
that is even more highly prized than cashmere.
The exceptionally fine fleece of
chiru, which insulates the animal against the harsh climate of the Tibetan
plateau and Kashmir's Ladakh region, has traditionally been woven into
shahtoosh shawls, another fine handloom product of the Kashmir Valley.
However, as at least four chirus
must be killed to make a single shawl the animal has had to be placed on the
protected list since 1975 by the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES).
In India, shahtoosh shawls, once a
part of bridal trousseaus, fetched around $5,000 a piece until the Indian
government banned the trade in 1991. The state government of Jammu and Kashmir,
which makes its own laws, delayed banning the trade until 2000 to help
artisans.
"We are now experimenting with
assisted reproduction of the chiru and other commercially valuable animal
species such as the musk deer," Ahmad Khursheed, wildlife management
expert at SKUAST, told IPS.
SKUAST already collaborates with the
Laboratory for Conservation of Endangered Species in Hyderabad and the
Smithsonian Institute in Washington to conserve several of Kashmir's endangered
species, including the chiru.
Kashmir's traditional shawl makers,
particularly female artisans, suffered heavily from the CITES ban on trade in
chiru products and there are fears that the art of weaving shahtoosh shawls, a
preserve of the Kashmir Valley, may vanish altogether.
"We have undertaken
conservation breeding of the chiru and have developed a technique for combing
out its wool without killing the animal," Khursheed said.
(Inter
Press Service)
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