Almost 100 kilometres north of Meghalaya's Mawlynnong - Asia's cleanest village, lies the village of Mairang, where Usha's Training Cum Production Centre is providing women with employment opportunities while also protecting the environment. With the Meghalaya State Pollution Control Board and Forest and Environment Departments enforcing plastic waste management rules and the government encouraging the use of jute and cloth bags, the Meghalaya State Rural Livelihoods Society saw this as an opportunity to both combat pollution and create employment opportunities for women across the state.
And that is what led to their collaboration with the USHA Silai School to set up training centers in Meghalaya. Now, the women are skilled enough to make much more than jute and cloth bags. Bhalang Jana, a former daily wage labourer, turned into an entrepreneur after taking training at the Usha Silai School in December 2022. Sharing her transformative journey, Bhalang said,
My first training was here. After joining USHA, my tailoring skills improved. Then I opened a shop to sell products in the local market in Mairang.
She highlighted the positive impact of the training, enabling her to increase her productivity and said,
Earlier at home, I could make only three to four frocks using a single sewing machine, but now I know how to use an electric machine. After buying the electric Usha sewing machine, I can make around 10 frocks in a day; my skill has leveled up.
This training has helped the women create beautiful and useful products, such as jute bags, baskets and mats. The jute products crafted by the women are sold in the local market, providing them with an additional source of income.
The training has empowered other women like Laraplang Wahlang, another beneficiary of the training given at the centre in Mairang. After completing her daily chores, she travels to the USHA Silai school by taxi to enhance her stitching and sewing skills on jute products. Laraplang makes carry bags, tiffin bags, file cases, pencil pouches, and flask bags, which are in huge demand. She likes making clothes, particularly for children and women. She added,
Sometimes we get orders worth Rs. 500-1000, we prepare every item of the product. I have been working hard, and want to collaborate with schools to make uniforms for children, ensuring a steady source of income. I also want to train other women to help them earn a livelihood like I do.
Laraplang wishes to support her husband, the sole breadwinner of the family, add to the family income and provide education to her children. She also aspires to set up a shop.
The trainer is a familiar face in the small village of Mairang. He has been associated with Usha Silai training for almost five years. And now with the training in making jute bags, he is convinced that jute bags are an even better option than those made of cloth.
The association between Usha Silai School and the Meghalaya State Rural Livelihoods Society was started with two demonstration centres but their success led to the opening of 16 new Training Cum Production Centres, covering several districts across Meghalaya.
The women of Mairang are now skilled to take bulk orders from Usha and other local orders for jute products. This initiative and training not only provides the women with an additional source of income, it also helps promote the use of locally produced, eco-friendly products.
By the end of 2022, for every Rs. 100 invested in the training of women, the Usha Silai School generated an average of Rs. 8,300, reported IIT-Delhi study
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Kushalta Ke Kadam, an initiative by USHA Silai School and NDTV has entered its eighth season. The aim is to empower more women across rural India by teaching them sewing skills and helping them open new doors of opportunities for themselves. The initiative encourages rural women to become financially independent and entrepreneurs by taking up sewing and training others in their respective communities.
Since 2011, the USHA Silai School initiative has trained more than 12 lakh rural women through over 33,000 Silai schools, spanning over 20,751 villages across India.
The women earn Rs. 4,000 – 5,000 per month on an average, with the highest recorded monthly earning being Rs. 84,000 in a month. This earning works as a catalyst towards building their self-confidence, reducing gender inequities, and raising their stature within their families and in society at large.
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Usha Silai School has empowered many rural women to support their family and send their children to school.
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Vegetables farmers from the Mizoram hills earn very little given the topography of the area. Usha Silai Schools have played an important part in this region by skilling women to financially contribute towards their households.
Usha Silai School learner Lucy has trained seven other women in her community, helping them to become financially independent.
Women like Kaviben from the nomadic Rebari community are finally laying down their roots as they begin to gain financial independence and thereby stability through Usha Silai School.
Usha Silai School, located in the Gujarat's Bhuj village, is enabling rural women to earn as much as Rs. 2,500-4,000 each month.
Usha Silai School, in association with a Gujarat based NGO called Kala Raksha, is trying to bring about a Silai revolution in Bhuj.
Besides training other women from their community, many Usha Silai School learners have become entrepreneurs in their own right.
With sewing becoming easily accessible and lucrative, the silai schools are also helping revive traditional motifs and designs.