Posts Tagged ‘social justice’

Can’t Eco and Socially Just Gifts Cost Less?

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

On September 27, Sami Grover wrote about Elegant Roots on Treehugger.com. Sami’s headline is “Elegant Roots: Green Doesn’t (Always) Come Cheap”.

Apparently, having been burned repeatedly by criticism of the “pricey-ness” of some green products, Sami felt compelled to an anticipatory rant in response using, as her subject, our $69 handmade, organic stuffed Penguin. Penguin by Dwelling.penguin_a_72-4x5

Sami concludes: “It seems to me that if someone is going to spend $60 on toys, then buying one or two well-made, safe and sustainable items beats filling up the toy chest with lead paint and plastic crap. (Not to mention there are plenty of ‘luxury’ toys out there that don’t carry such green credentials…)”

We, at ElegantRoots.com, agree wholeheartedly and appreciate greatly Sami’s endorsement. And we agree emphatically that people should Buy Less But Buy Better. As she suggests, there may be some “green” alternatives in a lower price range. But there are other issues at play here.

Social Justice and soulfulness. We offer things that are handmade — touched by the hand and spirit of the artisan. No machine-turned-out toy can match the feel. And, unlike the Wal-Mart ilk, ElegantRoots.com does not squeeze price concessions from the artisans. A fair price for a handmade item is what we’re all about. If a handmade, organic stuffed animal were to sell for half the price, who would bite it on that transaction? The artisan.

I guarantee a “similar” toy can be made in a sweatshop factory in China for a lower price. And who bites it on that transaction. The sweatshop indentured servant.

ElegantRoots.com exists to help create and sustain a market for artisan products that use traditional skills to create marketable designs (Penguins are not a traditional subject in Kenya). If there is no market for these products, traditional skills become economically nonviable. Traditional lifestyles are lost as people are forced to overcrowded cities to join the ranks of the displaced, dependent on sweatshops.

So, when people complain about the prices, what do they really want? Do they want social enterprises like ElegantRoots.com not to exist? Do they want the artisans in developing economies to get squeezed to the bone on prices in order to try to compete with sweatshops? Do they want only “cheap” plastic stuff that winds up in the dump?

kk-knitters-045-72-5x5 Bottom line, you get what you pay for. If you want a product created by hand by some one person with pride and care, working in a joyful community of women receiving fair trade prices, a Penguin from the Critter Knitters of rural Kenya is the perfect choice. Penguin from Critter Knitters

kimochidoll_a_72-4x5 The same applies within the borders of the US. If you want a limited edition Kimochi “emotions” doll made by hand in the US by a noted doll artist, Cody Thompson, shop at ElegantRoots.com.

You’ll be glad you did. So will the artisan somewhere (and we tell you where) who, because a market exists, can pursue his/her art and be independent.

And it all comes wrapped in our nonpareil, signature, and COMPLIMENTARY, eco-conscious gift wrap.

Later.

Tuesday Tracts: Social Enterprise — A Fish Story

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Ordinarily, we write these Tuesday Tracts to feature people who promote social justice through enterprise.Elegant Roots Blog

Today, though, it’s about the nature of social enterprise. Social enterprise blurs the distinction between “not-for-profit” and “for profit” entities. For-profit social enterprises, though organized to realize a profit, are not organized to maximize profit. Rather, the moving force is the notion that commercial viability through the opening of markets for economically marginalized people creates a strong, resilient and vibrant level of security and stability that improve all facets of life: nutrition, health, independence, education, etc.besweetxhosa_artisans-2-at-721

The elegant notion at ElegantRoots.com, from which we take our name, is that a people’s traditional arts when applied to a commercially viable design creates a win-win for artisan and recipient. But only when a market can be opened and maintained for the resulting product. The artisan wins, enjoying a traditional lifestyle and a growing independence, rather than being forced into the ever growing but not sustaining large urban sprawls. The purchaser wins by having a nonpareil product from the touch of an artisan’s hand. elcorazon_b-72-4x41

Creating a market for these products extends the benefits of globalization to people who have been otherwise left out.

But I promised you a fish story.

You know the old proverb: give a person a fish and you feed her for one day, teach a person to fish and you feed him for a lifetime…. Well, social enterprise pushes this further: Buy fish from a person at a fair price and you improve lives in a community immeasurably in innumerable ways beyond a full stomach.

Especially when you apply the long tail of the internet. E-commerce is the perfect way to create a market big enough for these wonderful, but specialty products.

Where do the social enterprisers come from? Typically, some event gives them exposure to a need and they organize their lives to fill it. That’s the story of Richard Speedy of Julio Pagliani bringing to an updated world the jewelry beading of the indigenous Tarahumara of Mexico’s Sierra Madre. It’s the story of Nadine Storyk Curtis of Be Sweet bringing to the world scarves and shawls from the mohair textile traditions alive in women’s collectives in South Africa. And of Marie So and Carol Chyau of Shokay International creating a luxury market for the incredibly soft yak-down produced by Tibetan herders.community-picture-72dpi

And the same is true for next week’s Tuesday Tracts featured social entrepreneur, Ellen Dorsch of Creative Women, bringing to the international market the textile skills of women of Ethiopia, Swaziland, and now, Afghanistan.

This is what ElegantRoots.com is founded on. We exist to extend the market for the Tarahumara of Mexico, for the South African women, for the Tibetan herders of western China, for the last family-run cotton mill in the USA, for jewelry designers who work with recycled materials, for all the artisans …. for people, planet, profit for all — the Triple Bottom Line.

Later.copy-small-box-row

Socially Responsible Business Supports Indigenous Mexican Jewelry Art

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Difficult and unreliable roads faced noted landscape and lifestyle photographer Richard Speedy travelling in northern Mexico’s Sierra Madre. He labored his way, fueled by storied-beauty to the rocky, pine-wooded heights around Copper Canyon to explore and capture the stunning scenery. In the remote village of Norogachi, Chihuahua, he found his own heart captured by the indigenous Tarahumara Indians and Mestizo farming families living there. Richard was drawn to their culture, seemingly little touched by modern life, but quickly realized that without sustainable economic viability the Norogachi way of life was threatened by a desperate and alienating exodus to urban centers. Instead of simply photographing yet another traditional culture’s demise, then turning his back, Richard committed to do something positive.jp-team-9333

Back home in New Jersey, Richard partnered with his wife Mara Speedy, Rob Thacker and designer Jody Olcott to find a way to help the Noragachi villagers maintain their culture and way of life. Building on the traditional talents of the Norogachi artisans, Richard and his team formed a jewelry-art group they called Julio Pagliani—an affectionate moniker he had been given during his Copper Canyon travels. Soon the Julio Pagliani team and their Norogachi partners were making some of the most exquisite, museum-quality jewelery you’ll find anywhere in the world.

The Julio Pagliani story and its extraordinary jewelry graphically demonstrate the power of a socially responsible enterprise. The team began with a desire to make a positive difference in an economically challenged part of the world, then worked tirelessly to make their vision a reality.

elcorazon_b-72-4x4The Julio Pagliani team started with Jody’s stunning jewelry designs of crocheted, beaded rope, inspired by local imagery of wildlife, crops, mountains and water. When traveling in Moscow, Jody purchased a beaded rope necklace. That Russian art inspired her designs. The team traveled to Norogachi with the Russian necklace and Jody’s designs. They spent hours with the village elders, deconstructing the Russian necklace and working on ways the centuries-old Norogachi beading traditions could be adapted to Jody’s designs. When a method was discovered and consensus reached, the next step was to train the villagers.jp2womenbeading

To date, the Julio Pagliani team has provided work to more than 60 villagers who now have a much more stable economic environment. The impact of the Julio Pagliani partnership so moved Norogachi’s former mayor that she wrote the following: “The (first) day I got the materials, two of the women were walking by my street. I went out to call on them and when I told them there was work, they actually started jumping with joy. Anita, my daughter-in-law said, ‘How big their need must be that they even jumped!’” Joy and talent can create great beauty. julioset_amber_72-4x4

A standing ovation to Richard, the Julio Pagliani team and their Norogachi partners! Together this special group has brought “beauty into the world in a way that honors indigenous cultures and pays the artisans fairly for their hard work.” And they have done it against many commercial odds! Just imagine 21st century business in Norogachi: no mail service, no UPS, no FedEx and the rugged roads into the village are often simply impassible.

Promote social justice and eco-consciousness by owning a genuine piece of Julio Pagliani jewelry-art. The spirit, generosity and joy with which this unparalleled jewelry is designed and handcrafted adds perceptibly to its breathtakingly simple beauty. Your support, too, adds to the spirit. Buy less, but BUY BETTER! Elegant Roots