The Dying Art of the Sari - India's feminine

Do women really feel empowered in a Western dress?


I am standing in Dilli Haat, New Delhi’s popular open-air handicrafts market, feeling a little guilty. My usual uniform for a hot summer evening — jeans, sandals and a comfortable cotton tunic — is putting people out of business.

“People in Delhi have abandoned their own traditional clothing,” says Bilal Ahmed, 24, a weaver who works for his family business in Jammu and Kashmir. Ahmed and his family specialize in Kadhai work, a type of embroidery. “We have started making more suits and shirts than saris,” he says. “People don’t buy saris anymore. Now they buy jeans.”

Indian Women’s Fashion: The Dying Art of the Sari - TIME

Ahmed has been working in the sari business for the past 13 years, during which the popularity of the famous garb has declined drastically in India’s cities. Handloom-weaving is a small-scale business, so there are no comprehensive statistics to track it, but weavers say they’ve noticed a marked decline in the past decade. V.P. Sharma, 48, has been employed as a weaver in the handloom sari industry in Bihar since 1988. He blames the slowdown on women’s changing tastes. It is particularly bad for handloom saris — the simple cotton saris that many Indian women used to wear every day. Their plain designs and muted colors have no appeal for women like Rashmi Raniwal, a 22-year-old sales assistant. “Sari?” she says, giggling. “I never wear it casually, only for formal occasions.”

Sales do pick up in the winter, Delhi’s high season for lavish parties and weddings, but fashionable young women are more interested in designer saris in sheer fabrics made on power looms, not the traditional handwoven silks like the ones in their mothers’cabinets. “I’m a sari freak,” says Deepa Nangia, 36, a nutritionist. “I love wearing saris for parties and functions, but that’s only designer saris, actually. Who wears traditional saris anymore?” She adds that she is the only one in her circle of friends who has any interest in wearing saris at all. “Youngsters feel like it’s more ‘oldy’ stuff,” she says. “I think it’s just gradually dying out with time.”

The most prized Indian sari styles — Banarasi and Kanjeevaram silks — are also facing new competition. Depending on the intricacy of design, it takes 15 to 30 days to weave one of these saris, which sell for $50 to $60. A Banarasi silk weaver, Abdul Basit Ansari, 37, has been working for the past 20 years weaving these garments, which come from the holy city of Varanasi. “The industry is facing lots of difficulties,” he says. “This is primarily because the sale of fake Banarasi saris made in power looms has been picking up and also because of the sale of cheap imports from China. The government is not stopping this, and our trade is suffering.”

Even in South India, where saris are much more popular than in the north, weavers are having trouble finding a market. Kanjeevaram saris, made in the town of Kanjeevaram, near Chennai, are made by cooperative weaver societies. In 2004, there were 22 weaver societies in Kanjeevaram, but only 13 are left today, according to Business Today. Of these 13, only five say they are doing well. Last year, the 13 weavers sold about $12 million worth of saris, down from $40 million in 2004. The best-known sari shops, like Nalli, which has gleaming showrooms in several big Indian cities, have contracts with some Kanjeevaram weaver co-ops, which is helping them hang on. But it isn’t enough to stop people from fleeing the profession. In and around Kanchipuram, famous for the Kanjeevaram silk saris that hail from this region, the manpower in the weaving industry has gone down drastically, from 60,000 10 years ago to about 20,000 today.

While those dwindling numbers may spell the death of India’s traditional weaving skills, women in Delhi embrace the change as a sign of progress. “There is a general perception that you would consider a woman in Western formal wear more empowered than her more traditional counterparts,” says Kriti Budhiraja, 20, a political science student at Delhi University. And to be fair, the sari industry is not exactly putting up a fight. It’s exiting the stage slowly and almost imperceptibly, with the exception perhaps of Indian soap operas, in which every woman is dressed in an impeccably ironed and draped sari while she cooks and schemes against her mother-in-law. Of course, everyone knows that’s not real life.

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India's feminine

Saari is an ugly piece of clothing.

Very very few ladies can carry it off well, it only suits very tall and very thin ladies, even then they have to know how to wear it, most women just don't have the skill or grace to make such an ugly piece of clothing look half decent.

Trouser tunics (shalwar kamiz) suits everyone (I only like the modern versions, not the baggy bright coloured old fashioned versions), I think trouser-tunics are a lot more universal aswell with more and more western women (atleast in the UK) wearing them.

The brightly coloured cocoons on Indian TV channels are an eye sore.

ever seen Maharani Gayatri Devi in a sari? then you would know grace.
just because no woman from your area can carry a sari to save her life, sari doesnt become ugly.

Just because someone doesn't share your point of view it doesn't make them wrong.
There is no need to insult people to prove a point.

I believe the sari is an elegant and graceful article of clothing when appropriately worn.
It is versatile. The same piece of fabric can be draped in countless ways allowing the owner to go from modestly covered to sultry and revealing....the choices are endless.

alright, my bad.

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India’s feminine

^ thank you.

:bb:

welcome. :slight_smile:
:champ:

Pallav an ugly piece of clothing like the Saari is best suited to your people.

Saari has never been a part of the culture of my people (Punjabis and Pashtuns) or any ethnicity in Pakistan.

Thank God we Muslims introduced stitched clothing to South Asia.

I'll have to agree Queen Gayatri Devi was a surprisingly beautiful and graceful lady for an Indian but she looked better in western attire or trouser-tunic compared to the saari.

Thanks Muzna. :slight_smile:

In my opinion the modest saari’s look the worst though, the figure hugging ones are the only ones which look half decent and that’s only on tall thin ladies. :smack:

Now what need was there for this retort?

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India's feminine

Saris are stunning.
I grew up watching both my grandmothers wearing them and they looked so graceful. My mother wears them very often as she's very fond of sarees and people don't stop complimenting her. She has an amazing collection from all over India, Bangladesh, etc. It's all about how you wear and carry it. And I don't think it's just the modern sarees that can look appealing, I love the traditional kanjeevarams and banarsi ones as well because they have a never dying charm to them.

As far as I can see the article talks about the dying art of sari IN INDIA !! So lets discuss about sari in the Indian context and not how its worn in NWFP or Afghanistan :snooty:

Coming back to the original article, its too premature to say that saris are dying out. Its only young women in metros who wear western attire. Most other women still wear saris.

^
What sort of a Punjabi are you? Advocating Saaris? Had it been laacha or dhoti I'd understand. Are you a SardarJi or a Khatri? I think you're probably the latter.

This is a Mussla/Sulla website so we're free to voice our opnions just as you're free to fly your Tarangah here (I doubt Pakistanis would be extended the same courtesy on an Indian website). :p

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India's feminine

Well, Nosherwan, Sari was preferred by Sindhi and Mohajir women. its the newer generation Sindhi and Mohajir ladies who are turning to Salwar Kameez.

but you know what? there are sane Pakistanis on this forum, and they make better representatives of your country.
Khuda Haifz.

The traditional dress of the Sindhi women is a blouse, skirt and veil, not saari. Sindhi dress is very similar to traditional Pashtun, Balochi and Kashmiri dress.

The traditional dress of the Urdu (don’t use the word ‘muhajir/immigrant’, they’re Pakistani now) ladies of Karachi is gharara (trouser-skirt hybrid), kurti and dupatta.

Today however most Pakistani women whether Punjabi, Pashtun, Urdu, Sindhi, Kashmiri or Balochi mostly wear trouser-tunics. It is only the women brainwashed by Star TV drama-serials who are in awe of Saari and every other ugly thing.

:snooty:

Would you kindly mind shutting up and not making this an issue of ethnicity? It’s a piece of fabric. Grow up and get over it.

Racist slurs are intolerable. Watch yourself.

Call me racist or whatever but I proudly say I am Anti-Indian, I have my reasons, every Indian I have met has turned out to be a complete and utter prick.

Even these ones on here who are acting all nice-nice carry hearts full of venom, Muh mein Ram, Ram. Bagal mein churi.

I’m against Indian influences in Pakistan because I want our people to be as distanced from them as possible, if it was upto me I’d pick up Pakistan and put it down near Turkey (my favourite Muslim country) or something.

It’s bad enough having 2 languages in common with them, I hope Khalistan is freed and then at least we wont have Punjabi in common with India, if Sikhs didn’t hate us Sullay so much we could work together for the liberation of Kashmir and Khalistan, Sikhs have more in common with us anyway in terms of race, culture and language. Raj Karega Khalsa!!!

If some silly Paki women dazzled by Bollywood movies and dramas have the right to act Indian then I also have the right to my opinion about them. :snooty:

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India’s feminine

^ I didn’t know that we were discussing saris in Pakistan & the effect of Indian influence :snooty:

You may have your opinion about anyone you wish. All we can do is pray for you and hope that you have better experiences in the future.

My mother and father and their parents were all born in India prior to partition and by that token I am of Indian origin. Does that make me a prick? Perhaps by your standards.

Does it make me any less Pakistani? No.

This comment shows how open minded you are about the people that you come across.
At this rate we can forget about any hopes of having better experiences in the future. If you cannot overcome your own preconceived notions then it is highly unlikely that someone else will be able to help you.

Nobody is objecting to your opinion. It is the manner in which your opinion is expressed that is offensive.

This is an open forum that allows people to share ideas. We do not restrict what you say…but we do moderate how you say it.

Re: The Dying Art of the Sari - India's feminine

i love saris...all i can sa here to ppl is stop being so racist!