[Reader-list] Jugaad innovation

Jeebesh Bagchi jeebesh at sarai.net
Tue Aug 24 13:50:13 IST 2004


"Jugaad innovation"

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Condoms oil wheels of industry
By Nivedita Pathak
BBC Hindi service

Older weavers balk at using the condom lubricant on looms

The Indian city of Varanasi is getting through around 600,000 condoms a 
day, but this is no population control exercise.

The weavers of the holy city, home to the world-famous Banarasi saris, 
have made the contraceptives a vital part of garment production.

The weaver rubs the condom on the loom's shuttle, which is softened by 
the lubricant thus making the process of weaving faster.

The lubricant does not leave any stain on the silk thread which might 
soil the valuable saris.

There are around 150,000 to 200,000 hand and power looms in Varanasi 
alone and almost all are using the technique.

And every loom has a daily consumption of three or four condoms.

At first, weavers stocked up on condoms from the family planning 
department under a government scheme to provide them free of cost.

Some weavers even registered with fake identities to get their hands on 
the precious prophylactics.

Generation gap

Mahfooz Alam, convener of the Bunkar Bachao Aandolan (or Save the 
Weavers Movement), says officials got wise to the scam, and corruption 
set in.

UNUSUAL USES FOR CONDOMS

Villagers use them to carry water when working in fields

For waterproofing ceilings: condoms are spread under the cement-concrete 
mortar

Can be mixed with tar and concrete to give a smooth finish to roads

Can be placed over the ends of guns to protect them in desert sandstorms

Drugs 'mules' swallow condoms filled with drugs to smuggle them across 
borders

Family planning personnel procured condoms from government hospitals and 
sold them to general stores.

These stores then sold them on to the weavers at 10 rupees a dozen.

Mr Alam says the older generation of weaver is averse to the technique 
but the younger generation wants things done at a faster pace.

Some of the weavers fear the industry could be at risk if sari buyers 
learn their garments are made with condom lubricant.

But Mr Alam says many weavers have to use the technique.

They would use another lubricant if there were one available that were 
better, he says.                       





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