by author: Sarah Lance
Dear Friends of Sari Bari
The sky is blue and the sun is brightly lighting up the city with energy and warmth.
We have already welcomed the heat of summer here in Kolkata with temps soaring over 100 in these last days of March. We are perched under the powerful fans that you can only find in India and are continuing to make some pretty beautiful stuff in spite of the heat!
The last years have been hard times for many in the States and for some time we were shielded here in India. However, in the past year we have seen an exponential rise in prices not only in the material goods that we use for production but in the basic costs of living, from rent to rice. India is currently at 16% inflation with the prices on basic food and necessities rising exponentially in the last year. The value of the Indian Rupee has fallen and it is just not stretching as far as it did two years ago.
At Sari Bari we have seen this raise in prices deeply affect our women and their ability to stretch the income they make at Sari Bari to cover their expenses. So this year we are offering all the women of Sari Bari a healthy raise in a desire to better support the women and their families. Because of this, we will be raising prices on Sari Bari Products to support these raises and to cover the increasing costs of goods and services that we need to run the business of Sari Bari.
As of April 1, 2012, you will see a price difference in many of the items at www.saribari.com. We will continue to introduce new items for you to enjoy and a number of new lower priced items so the opportunity to share in the freedom stories at Sari Bari remains open to everyone.
We apologize for the Sari Bari websites empty pages in February and March. We have been facing some production challenges that now seem to be working themselves out. And we are hopeful that raises, newly introduced Artisan Producer Forums (where the women can be heard and make decisions about how Sari Bari is run), and a more intense focus on aftercare and mental health support will positively affect the overall outlook for the Sari Bari Community from personal mental health to production.
We are so thankful for your continued support of the cause of Freedom for the women at Sari Bari through your purchasing power. You have a choice and we are thankful that you have chosen us at Sari Bari.
For all of us at Sari Bari,
Sarah Lance, Managing Director
Sari Bari wants to invite you to participate in its first ever auction. Sari Bari is auctioning two unique king size blankets 92×108. Each blanket is made up of the parts of more than 20 saris. Each section of the blanket is stitched with the corresponding thread color and each patch is artistically applied to bring out the beauty of the over all piece
These Special Auction King Size Bed blankets are artistic tapestries of color. They have been specially designed for this auction and will not be available for sale on the Sari Bari website. Our Sari Bari Artisans Laxmi and Pornima gave many extra hours to the stitching and detailing of these wonderfully large pieces of Art. These blankets are symbols of restoration and hope for Pornima and Laxmi and through their labors the long-term vision for freedom through Sari Bari is pressed forward and the opportunity for the freedom of more women grows!
We hope you will celebrate with us the artistic nature of the work that we do at Sari Bari. We are in the business freedom, of making the old new, bringing forth beauty and restoring wholeness to that which has been cast off.
The funds from the Auction will be used by Sari Bari toward the purchase of 2 new desktop computers, a printer/scanner, a server and 2 sewing machines. We hope that we will be able to raise all or part of the funds needed to purchase these items which are needed to expand our capacity and efficiency.
We hope you like the blankets and throw your hat into the ring for the first ever Sari Bari Auction! The two blankets will vary slightly in patch placement and patch color but the photo’s give a clear representation of the blanket and color scheme.
Go to the following links to place your bids:
Sari Bari Auction King Size Blankets (Download the slide show for best viewing!)
Reflection by Melissa
Sometimes it’s the little things…that you see – that you notice…and they make you think, and they bring you joy…or wonder…
…i watched my friend packing up to leave SB the other day. She carefully folded the blanket she was working on. She fixed her sari. She worked pretty hard to try and clean all the little pieces of string off her sari (I usually just leave with little strings hanging off my clothes in whatever why they decided to attach themselves to me). And then she looked at the clock and had 5 minutes left until she was supposed to leave. So she started getting thread ready for the next day, so when she came in the next day she’d be ready to start sewing. She was working so diligently – not wasting any time. I can’t say why I thought this was so beautiful – I just did…maybe because she was working so hard. Maybe because she didn’t want to cut corners. Maybe because there was a sense of pride about her every action – a sense of pride that she hasn’t always had in regards to her work. regardless, it was beautiful.
…one of my friends makes “chutney” at lunch almost every day. You or I would call it salsa. She mixes tomato, chili and cilantro – and eats it with her rice. But don’t be confused…its NOT salsa. You see, she uses equal parts chili and tomato (so when she offers it to me I can only eat a little cause its so spicy) – and she uses her hand to squish the chili and tomato, and mix in the salt and cilantro. No knife necessary. For some reason I love to watch her make it.
…today I went into one of the offices before it was open. Only the morning manager was in – and while I picked up the stuff I needed to collect she stopped and we chatted for a bit. I told her that seeing her smile and the way she carries herself gives me joy. Her life and her love of the women at Sari Bari in a word is breathtaking.
reflection by Beth Waterman
Sari Bari celebrations are a normal practice for us here in Kolkata. Maybe it is a reaction to the intensity of suffering we see and experience through our friends here, maybe we just like to have a good time, most definitely we’ve chosen to declare goodness and value and joy in the face of what are often desperate hopeless, dire situations. Sari Bari is choosing to push through darkness, and live in a new way…flowers in the cracks of cement walkways, trees in a concrete jungle, hope and celebration in the face of abandonment and oppression.
Our Sari Bari 5 year anniversary retreat to the mountains was no exception. Our gift to one another was three days of fresh mountain air and 59 bundled up ladies with their new Christmas shawls, clothes, and socks soaking up every moment…for them this was a trip of relaxation. Most of them were able to leave their children at home for these few days, which meant their responsibilities of cooking, cleaning, and family maintenance were left in Kolkata as well. Gangtok was a breath of fresh air for our sisters who daily work so hard to support and care for their families.
For me the most beautiful moments of our time together in the mountains happened our last night together, a birthday celebration to mark 5 years of Freedom for Sari Bari. Listening to Sarah recount our humble beginnings and celebrate the two women who paved the way for the 70 others who have followed left me in tears and full of thankfulness that I get to be a part of this journey. As each Sari Bari training group stood to be recognized and applauded, 5 years of memories flooded and bled into one big mosaic of our time together. All we’ve been through, all we’ve suffered and celebrated and learned along the way. To have the opportunity of knowing such courageous and heroic women is my honor and great joy. Stories unthinkable fill our Sari Bari walls, but restoration and hope is overcoming even the most tragic of lives among our friends. As staff member Kyle Scott sang to our ladies in one of his most recent songs “[their] will to live, taught me to hope”…
And thus is my final reflection on our time together in Gangtok, celebrations of 5 years worth of courage and hope, through the mediums of eating, snow capped mountains and crisp air, beautiful birthday cakes and lots of Bollywood dancing. We spent three days together with sisters who have shown us there is something more powerful than the oppression they’ve experienced.
Here’s to another 5 years of new life in the making.




