Wednesday, 24 August 2011

further kabul


very busy days here in Kabul, as it is Ramadan the times are 7am to 2 pm at the workshop then rushing to find silks and textiles for the collection. 
Hoping to do the big textile necklace with a lovely cousin of Belquis, she is employing 200 woman and needs desperately work for them - and the craftsman and women at TM are all well and really pleased I came back which is really gratifying and makes me feel all the stress was worthwhile..

Security is not good here at the moment, most foreigners on lock down, a lot of road blocks, checks etc  but have a nice driver Zia who takes us here and there. 

I was speaking to Javid's father today - a dignified and wonderful old man who had been a teacher, he was telling me how beautiful Afghan culture can be in regards to the family and community and religion then I asked what he felt about the future for the country he shook his head sadly and said there is no future for his country - it is only a land for killing and death now ...we have become animals here - was so sad - his eyes just spoke of his heart break of his beautiful country destroyed. 
Made me want to cry... when I asked what about his grandchildren lives .. he just shook his head.


walking through the bazaar every day to Javid's new workshop has been an adventure in itself, considered an unsafe area at first one walks through with caution and head down ..but then the next time you look up and smile and when you smile even the most frightening Taliban fierce face under big turbans and shawls and beards suddenly opens into a beautiful smile and wave and nod in greeting - isn't smiling wonderful?

further kabul


very busy days here in Kabul, as it is Ramadan the times are 7am to 2 pm at the workshop then rushing to find silks and textiles for the collection. 
Hoping to do the big textile necklace with a lovely cousin of Belquis, she is employing 200 woman and needs desperately work for them - and the craftsman and women at TM are all well and really pleased I came back which is really gratifying and makes me feel all the stress was worthwhile..

Security is not good here at the moment, most foreigners on lock down, a lot of road blocks, checks etc  but have a nice driver Zia who takes us here and there. 

I was speaking to Javid's father today - a dignified and wonderful old man who had been a teacher, he was telling me how beautiful Afghan culture can be in regards to the family and community and religion then I asked what he felt about the future for the country he shook his head sadly and said there is no future for his country - it is only a land for killing and death now ...we have become animals here - was so sad - his eyes just spoke of his heart break of his beautiful country destroyed. 
Made me want to cry... when I asked what about his grandchildren lives .. he just shook his head.


walking through the bazaar every day to Javid's new workshop has been an adventure in itself, considered an unsafe area at first one walks through with caution and head down ..but then the next time you look up and smile and when you smile even the most frightening Taliban fierce face under big turbans and shawls and beards suddenly opens into a beautiful smile and wave and nod in greeting - isn't smiling wonderful?

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Kabul



21.8.11
It is so stunning and staggering to fly out of India, whose plains are filled with cities and roads all spewing together - to raise over the mountains and reach this incredible silent vast landscape that is a brown mountainous desert, steep valleys and snaking dry river beds, no one, no towns , cities roads, just the occasional tiny fertile green drop and small farms and terraced fields nestled in the hills. 
it is majestic and humbling. 

India was amazing - so exciting to be there at this time of Gandhian revival and to see the whole society mobilised, farmers have joined now and students and workers - Jaipur and Delhi were full of demonstrations, candle lit night vigils, protests in the monsoon rain, in the soaring mid day sun .. it has been phenomenal, I am amazed and so proud. 

Anna Hazare has managed to do something that India has not seen since Gandhi. Bringing people together, Muslims, Hindu's , different castes, led by the middle classes maybe but a peoples demand for the end of corruption. 
 
Kabul, very hot, quiet after last weeks bombs - but good to be here, there is not longer the old fort - the kala - to stay in so I am staying at a hotel - a wonky old place behind corrugated iron and machine gun guards - called the Gandamack-  there is a little garden which has lovely flowers, it is quiet and peaceful. 

22.8.11

Went to Murad khane and was so delighted to see how impressive the institute looks, with flower filled courtyards, Rumi's poems painted in elegant calligraphic on the walls and the rooms filled with students learning - woodwork, calligraphy, ceramic's and jewellery, the warren of buildings are filled with laughter and life. Having watched the restoration over the last four years it is wonderful to see it now as it was meant to be, a peaceful place of learning and creativity. 

It was wonderful to see everyone again and Javid has moved to a great new workshop with more space and air - delighted to see the girls cutting and polishing stones  - I have not seen girls working with stones anywhere else in Asia - what a victory!

We sat on the floor and discussed the new collection the materials and designs - drawings and stones brought out for discussion and tomorrow work will start. 
It is Ramadan and so only half days at work ..

23. 8. 11

Today we went to find silks for the new collection, driving through terrible traffic and road blocks, army and police circling with machine guns - but smiles too..

We went to visit the jewellery school, I was so impressed by a young woman who is the only girl in year one - she is deaf and dumb but brave enough to face a class room of boys and learn a new skill - I was humbled.
Work is moving at a good pace, should see the first enamelled butterfly pieces tomorrow ..

went to rummage with in Chicken street - looking at old jewellery and ceramics to find inspiration. Stalls of fur coats, sheep skin coats, heavy wool shawls, silver Turkmen jewellery, Russian tea pots and old watches, Ikat coats from Uzbekistan and silk Chapan's from the south of Afghanistan ...many treasures to be found here.. 
I love walking in the street, Zia who is driving us walked close by past stalls of fresh Afghan bread being bought for feasting when the sun goes down, carts of fresh grapes and melons... past moter bikes with beautifully woven donkey bags slung over them and carpeted saddle's.
So much to see, so much to absorb.. 

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

Independence Day India

Arrived in monsoon Delhi in time to witness the very moving independence day celebrations, with the flag raising in the warm rain and singing of the stirring national anthem it all brought my close to tears to think of Gandhi and all those who sacrificed their lives for an independent India 


I imagine waking on this morning 65 years ago and knowing after 300 years and a long struggle the country was free of colonial  rule. 

It is so sad then to open the newspaper and read about the accusations of corruption within the government, and to read the tragic story of the Advivasi's of India, the tribals who have lost so much, India is a remarkable country but still so many problems ...
x

Friday, 15 July 2011

The Uzbek Project explained

It all started a year ago when I was visiting Romeo in Delhi - Romeo and his sister Juliet - are Indian dealers in Antique jewellery - among the heaps of ancient beads and  amulets,Tibetan charms, Tribal bracelets, and south Indian gold  I found a rather unusual and remarkable cuff .. made of heavy silver and covered in fine enamel work of tantalising blues and greens in floral and geometric designs. I was intrigued and asked about it. From Bukhara I was told - 19th century Uzbek.
I bought the piece and with it a pair of huge earrings of the same design and origin.

I took the pieces back to London and found myself studying them and wondering about them. 
Finally coming to the conclusion I had to go to Bukhara and find out if craftsmen there were still making such fine work and if they were would they be willing to work with me on a collection of beautiful coloured enamel pieces on silver - drawing inspiration from the stunning tile work of the 9th century mosques of Samarkand. I have always loved central Asian Ikat textiles and have collected a few over the years and thought these too could become interesting inspirations for the jewellery ...

So, when a few weeks ago a small space presented itself unexpectedly, I grabbed the moment and after four frustrating visits to the Uzbek Embassy came away proudly holding a visa and off I went ...

My arrival in Tashkent at 2am was so exciting - a new country and a new culture and history and people and food and jewellery!! and what a fascinating history too...my mind has been full of stories of Moguls, Mongols, Greeks, ancient warrior nomads,. wave after wave of invasion, pillaging, massacres, the destruction of whole cities, libraries of ancient books, looting, a huge slave trade, scientists, astrologers, poets and the brilliant craftsmen from all over who came to work for the Emirs. It is hard to imagine how people are so warm hospitable and welcoming after a history of so much brutal violence.
 
The stories of the silk roads and the massive movement of silk, gems, spices from China to the Mediterranean and how delightfully easy to sit in the registan in Bukhara and imagine the camels coming in laden and the turbaned merchants in their Ikat coats, turbans  and long beards coming to inspect the goods of foreign traders.

I spent a day in Tashkent and was charmed by its quiet tree lined streets and the eccentric taxi system where due to so many changes of road names, from Uzbek to Russian to Soviet to Uzbek again which means no one seems to know where anything is and the taxi's (there are 2 kinds, one with little taxi signs and the other is just any old car and it seems any old body who wants to earn some extra cash?) so you stand  in the street and the next passing car  (tiny and soviet) will whizz to a halt you say where you are trying to go, unlikely they speak English so trying to pronounce the names with a Russian accent helps, then you jump in - they may scream to a halt for another few passengers until they reach the area they assume you are going, if after endless circling and trying the destination can not be found, they give up with a solid gold toothed smile and you jump out and try some one else or if you are lucky you find it...

I went to museums and mosques, shops and markets and was so lucky to wonder into a shop called Human Hand - a collection of young Uzbek designers working in fashion and accessories. I look around and saw some interesting jewellery, I ask about the maker - am kindly directed to his studio ten minutes away and meet the utterly delightful Ulugbek - a talented and interesting man. We sit and discuss making jewellery - design, and then everything else from communism to his wife's thesis on ancient nomadic symbolism in embroidery..whilst sitting a young woman, a psychologist turned designer, grand daughter of Uzbekistan greatest writer poet pops in and while chatting I find out they also know Umida - a designer whose name I had been given through a friend. They invite me to join them at a dinner party at Umida's .. It was a splendid evening of young talented designers, film makers and art critic's all lovely, bright, interesting people it was a perfect evening, although much concern that I was heading to Samakand by myself the next morning by train, warnings about gypsies..theft..dangers..

I was thrilled to be riding on the train although hot, in an old fashion carriage with a Russian family and an old Uzbek lady, all food on the journey was shared and I watched the flat dry landscape pass transfixed.  Past small farms with a  few cows and donkeys, small herds of ragged sheep. On the horizon tantalising mountains could be seen . Old men in embroidered skull caps and ladies in long bright patterned kaftan's and loose trousered underneath got on and off the slow train.

Finally to Samarkand - a name so evocative and sensual. As I raced in a tiny taxi - to a Soviet style hotel were nothing worked, reeking of stale Russian tobacco and cockroach's scuttling in the bathroom, no electricity and stern staff - the city  felt different in energy to Tashkent, faster,wilder.. more Tajik and there are fewer Uzbeks here.

I wondered in a dream around the famous registan of Samarkand - the huge tiled mosques are hard to believe, i laughed out loud with amazement at their beauty . .. the square was busy with Uzbek people wondering and enjoying - it seemed many  country people had come to see the famous Mosques. Groups of older ladies laughing with their gold teeth flashing in the sun and dresses in the wildest patterns and coloured kaftans..they had painted black lines on their faces to join their eye brows in the the middle - looks good, wearing bright modern Ikats, the young girls are beautiful , tall and slim with wonderful cut short Ikat dresses and trousers, some turbaned old men with white beards sitting playing back gammon under the trees in the shade. I wondered if Afghanistan could every be like this - groups of bold confident women out walking, eating and laughing, working in public places and gathering to exclaim and examine my bracelets and rings and comparing jewellery with theirs.

One day I went out of the city to visit a small town market full of all kinds of people, horse and carts parked patiently and stalls of warm and delicious smelling round bread and vegetables and melons, gold hats with long gold tassel's to veil the face, ikats, carpets and gold embroidered jackets, it was an enjoyable visit. 

There is a lot of horse meat on the menu here, along the road we passed a few fine small horses. What joy it would be to ride here..
I visited mosques and madrassahs of perfect proportion and faultless design, some leaning minarets with such glorious tile work that makes you just sigh in awe, gardens and pubic parks with fountains and tree's for shade and beauty abound in the city.
I feel a little ill in Samarkand, maybe the heat.. but then off again ... by car with the charming Aziz to Bukhara .. a 4 hour drive in the heat. Every day the temperature seems to be raising - since the Aral  sea disaster apparently the climate has gotten much hotter. We chat about the Arab spring and I find to my surprise that no one I talk to here approves of it - seeing the revolutions as very bad, or backed by the Russians or Americans, there does not seem to be the belief that they may have been started by the people themselves. We talk about Palestine, terrorism and the fears of it in Uzbekistan, the Soviet times and life since Independence...a very interesting journey.

We arrive in a very hot and beautiful Bukhara. I go to a sweet old guest house with original painted murals and courtyard and very thick cool walls.
Exploring the city was so exciting, you just keep walking and come upon more and more stunning intriguing surprises - courtyard caravansaries with 2 floors of rooms and stone ponds of brown water with gangs of little boys swimming and diving in with shady trees surrounding the water. 
I found a  museum in a beautiful old house with floor to ceiling windows and tiled floors, tiny alleys with leaning old buildings and places to stall camels, turquoise tiled domes dot the skyline, minarets like light houses for the caravans coming to the city over the desert. 
I sat on a bench under the mulberry trees and watched the evening come and crowds of people having their evening stroll,  grandparents with little children running in circles, young lovers holding hands, groups of women gossipping and chatting, old men joined me on the bench's to watch. It is heaven , peaceful and full of good life.

I eat at an outdoor  restaurant on the bank of a pond with weeping willow trees and stone steps to the pool, the raised wooden beds were you can lay on carpets and eat from the small table  the delicious dishes  of fresh tomatoes and aubergine and garlic.. yogurt and beetroot and  drink green tea and watch the families eating and having such a good time.

I met an interesting couple from Belarus - she studying the politic in Uzbekistan - difficult but interesting.
I wondered and everywhere I went I met lovely people, getting into long conversations about life, about the culture, about jewellery..again the enamel bracelet continues its journey .. from Uzbekistan to India, to London and back to Bukhara .. but no one recognised the work, it moved from hand to hand, was examined under loops, past to antique dealers, grandfathers and  experts .. and  it came back as Russian from the Tsar time, to Tajik, to China.. but all agree not Bukhara.. maybe Khiva in the west there are some places they may have used enamel.. my search was not going well.

I looked at old Ikats and feel in love with their beautiful simple bold natural dyed colours and wonderful design. I looked at old jewellery and there was really nothing like the cuff...
I talked to workshops and they were keen to try but with it being illegal to export precious metals  .. my mission was not looking possible.

met the utterly charming Behruz by chance - my friend Irene from Roma had told me about him but his number had changed and I did not think I would  ever find him but I did. He sells stunning old textiles, ceramic's and Ikats - a complete delight, he took me to the famous Ark - the walled city where the Emir lived with 3000 citizens  with 3 mosques, libraries full of ancient books, the gold coin minting workshop, the artisans, the harem, all beautiful, amazing restoration work, but so much was destroyed when the Russians invaded in the 19th century.

Behruz took me down small winding lanes and under small arches and through courtyards to a 16th century hamam. In I went through dark low stone passages that opened to a dim room with sunlight filtering through latticed stone windows. Thin elegant wooden beams colonnaded the room and were hung with amulets to keep away the evil eye, bunches of chamomile, small scented triangle talisman, and eye beads. An old lady with hennaed hair lay on a wooden  bed watching me undress and took me down stairs into a tunnel , that opened into small doomed rooms with stone floors the heat was staggering and I had to breath carefully to not panic and flee the heat and claustrophobia. I was washed, scrubbed and covered in a ginger, pepper, cardamom, egg mix, washed again and left to lay on the hot stone floor while the other rooms were washed down, I chatted to another lady being cleaned, she handed me a pot of yogurt to put on my face, the naked lady scrubbing me told me her son may be off to London as a champion chess player,
It was heaven.

Days later I left on the train - by now the city had grown so hot that the air was heavy, the wind was hotter, I got heat rashes - it was staggering, in a few days it will up to the 50's, it was interesting to be in that heat to adjust your movements to the slowest pace, to talk slowly and drink hot green tea from old Russian
tea pots in the shade.
The train was so hot that I thought I may die, the train ground to a halt in the middle of no where and sat groaning - sweat dripped down my back, chest, legs, face, I lay on the bench in an airless cabin with a huge fat old lady who closed her eyes and went very still - it was agony - when finally the train did start again nearly an hour later the tiny breeze that came in from the small window offered some relief.

Back to Tashkent to have more meetings with Ulugbek re setting up a work shop together . There is potential but need to really explore this.
So the mystery of the cuff is still unsolved.

Thursday, 2 June 2011

The Uzbekistan Project: Tashkent


I arrived at 2am and the streets were so quiet and I was too tired to take
much in.. 
This morning i set out to explore the city, it is rather
charming and quiet, long broad soviet style avenues, tree lined, large
formal parks with shady trees and fountains ..punctuated by huge
rather bizar soviet imperialist achicecture - all government
buildings, I dont think there are enough people to populate them ..
there was a huge population drop when the soviets withdrew and many
russians chose to leave.

There is not much traffic, not many cars and hardly any people.. rather nice!
The people I have met so far have been lovely, really kind. you just
go and stand in the street and any old car may stop, as being a taxi is
an informal job that anyone can do - so if you are on your way to work
you could stop and pick people up and charge a bit. It feels a little
odd crawling into a strangers little old russian car and asking to be
dropped somewhere -

I went to 3 museums, and some craft shops, 
in one shop - with a few pieces by young uzbek designers I asked about jewellers and was
directed to a wonderful man - a jewellery designer who was so helpful
and informative and charming - yet, alas I fear the mission may not be
accomplished .. we could do a one off collection here but seems that
the government will not allow the exporting of any jewellery of any
kind.. so you can smuggle but a risk..so the idea of setting up
production looks a challenge.

I am going to a party tonight with the Tashkent boho scene.. the
jeweller, a fashion designer (whose name I was given by a friends
friends to look up) and a film maker and an artist are having a dinner
party .. we shall see

Off to Samarkand tomorrow - I am not giving up yet but it may be
tricky.. may have to think of Turkey for our silver collection
hope all are well in our various spots around the world!xxx

Friday, 29 April 2011

Small in Hollywood

What a day yesterday - it all started Wednesday when we had a call
from Laura Dern,  the lovely beautiful actress asking if she and
Cecilia Peck could borrow some jewellery for a special event
commemorating the life of Gregory Peck - because the postal service
had made a a special stamp with an image of Gregory Peck.

Cecilia Peck came in - a beautiful gentle lovely lady and we fussed
and tried different necklaces on her and found the perfect collection
of pieces for she and Laura to wear. Then Cecilia kindly invited
Marcia and I to the event!

I was so excited - I have loved Gregory Peck for a long lone time - he
seems to somehow embody the perfect man - the Atticus Finch of to Kill
a Mocking Bird - so honourable and righteous - so handsome and decent,
standing up for what is right - A wonderful father and husband - a
dignified, politically active, left leaning humanitarian - in watching
his films - the black and white movies of the 1940's and technicolour
of the 1950's it seems a time of quality - of proper manners and
sophistication.


Marcia and I were invited to the friends and family entrance at the
academy building and all the paparazzi went mad with Sharon Stone who
was introducing the event - and the Peck family.
Marcia and I sat through the films clips, the wonderful talks by
Morgan Freeman, laura Dern, his sons and daughter, we cried at the
scene in to kill a mockingbird when all the black people in the
courtroom balcony stand up as Atticus leaves the court room out of
respect for him..


Sydney Poitier was there, Tina Sinatra, David Niven's son, the actress
who played Scout in the film, there was messages from Harper Lee -
It was wonderful -

Later that day slightly recomposed - we had our Turquoise Mountain
Show for the Afghan collection - a lovely evening - the shop full of
exotic colourful birds of women - a great success ..

Later that evening as we went to dinner to celebrate who was at the
next table but the beautiful Sophia Loren!
Ah Hollywood ...xx

Thursday, 21 April 2011

More Bolivia

what a glorious day it was ...I went to the cooperative association
house and we all jumped in to an old truck and headed off to the mine.
La Paz rather delightfully just ends - hustle bustle buses trucks
markets stalls houses then stop...nothing but vast heart breaking
beautiful mountains, glorious deep valleys full of llama herds the odd
tiny farmstead but no one ..nothing but beautiful mountains.
As we drove the head of the coop explained that they believed there is
a demon that lives in the mine - he is called affectionately the Uncle
- he has forbidden woman to enter the min. Phew.

They explained more about the benefits of the certification - they are
saving to by an oven to refine the gold themselves as they believe
that the local refinery cheats them. They also explained about the
Mercury recycling and now they have a method of reactivating the
Mercury so it never runs out.

As we rose up the mountains with snow capped peaks around up we
reached El Cumbre - the summit where the truck skidded to a halt and
everyone jumped out - to give their respects to Panchamama - the earth
mother - a bottle of alcohol was produced and sprinkled on the ground
everyone took a swig and spat it on to the ground. She loves alcohol
apparently and the more they can be on her good side the more gold,
but also more seriously she protects them in the mine.

After a couple of hours we left the road and bumped down a dirt road
and stopped on the edge of a precipice. I looked down and down through
mists and beautiful giant curling ferns and wild orchids to the
invisible bottom of the mountain. it looked a long way.
We set off - down a narrow rocky steep path twisting and turning
snaking down over little streams past water falls and flowering lichen
the path was wide enough for one and slippery, everything the miners
need has to be carried in on their backs - there is no other way down.
We passed a few tin shacks where miners and their families lives, the
miners we passed smiled big gold toothed smiles and shook hands
respectfully and then we would edge passed each other and continue. My
legs felt like rubber and my lungs were struggling with the altitude,
it was so beautiful the darting yellow birds big butterflies,
apparently also panthers and deer live here. We passed a few small
shrines with fresh flowers Donna Juana elegantly drew her finger cross
her throat in explanation for the shrines. Miners who had died in the
mine of fallen off the path in the rains. Everyone crossed them selves
and muttered prayers as we passed them. 2 miners where killed a few
months ago from falling rocks.

We finally  reached the bottom after about 45 minutes. It was chilly
and damp with streams and waterfalls converging, I was shown around
the mine, a small gathering of tin roofed buildings housing the
tumblers, grinders and Mercury pool, all very simple and muddy. I was
shown the entrance to the mine with cold dank air and dark frightening
tunnel - the mine runs about a kilometre up the mountain side. Truly a
dangerous and difficult job.


We sat in the little common room and the miners coming off duty sat
and picked coca leaves out of a plastic bag making a big wad in their
mouths - its bitter so Donna Juana poured boiling water over the
leaves to make a tea to help me up the mountain.
By 4 pm we had to start as it gets dark at 6 and it was a long way
up.. I cold not even see the summit. I started up but very soon my
lungs were bursting and my heart pounding - it was a huge effort
climbing the rocks and pulling myself up with roots etc on the step
parts. For a few minutes I really panicked and thought I am not going
to make it up. I shall have to sleep here or spend the rest of my life
down here. I could get used to it... But slowly slowly we made it up,
stopping every once in a while to catch my breath and rest. On an
opposite peak a small train of miners were going to work for the night
shift (the machinery can not be turned off so the miners are on 8 hour
shifts all day all night. they wold whistled and called across one
mountain peak to another teasing poor Eduardo who was taking me up,
much laughter ...and giving me a chance to catch my breath. Finally
made it to the top after an hour or so . Exhausted and shaky legs.
But good to have seen the mine, met miners and understand the process
and see the land where its coming from .
xx

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

Bolivia

Hello  - just an update on my trip here. 
I arrived at dawn on Monday
after a long trip and was so excited to be back, it really is the most
dramatic and extraordinary city. I look at it and wonder why would
anyone build a city nestled precariously among lunar jagged mountains,
it is so dry and the sun so fierce, it is so high that you struggle to
breath easily. It was settled by the Aymara for gold of course, the
river that runs through it, now a stenching toxic death river was full
of gold.


I am very proud as president Evo Morales is now at the for front on
the fight against climate change, he has stood up at the UN for more
extreme action, more then any other country. It is because Bolivia is
suffering hugely as a result of climate change. Glaciers have melted
away, crops fail from over heating, there is drought then flooding..
for one of the poorest countries in the world this is a catastrophe.
The city has an old colonial part, all cobbled narrow streets ornate
baroque churches and colonnaded houses. there is also El Alto the poor
part at the top of the mountain where the poor farmers are migrating
hoping to find work. It is a busy dirty city with buses pumping thick
black smoke and a lot of crime. Every taxi you get in is a tense ride
not knowing if you will be kidnapped and robbed - taxi's don't have a
good reputation here. 


Everyone at the cooperative asked me to please
remove all my bracelet's etc as they tell me (with much graphic sign
language) that my arm will be cut off or my throat cut.. umm..
The streets are full of the Chola's - Indian ladies who wear large
petticoeated skirts, a bowler hat perched on the top of their head, a
lovely fringed shawl of alpaca and their hair in two long plaits that
tie at their waist with coloured pompoms, they sit on the street
selling chilits, tissues or fruit which they then roll onto a shawls
and pack  on to their backs with the baby and other goods.
They are so beautiful!



Bolivia has the worlds shortest people I recently found out and it is
true that a lot of people come up to my waist - but this always causes
many smiles, especially when I squeeze into the public mini bus to
whizz around town.

Today I went with Daniel, he works at cumbrseyallama, a group looking
at the mines, advising and supporting the fair trade process - he is
also  working with ARM (association of responsible miners)  we went to
the office of the cooperative of Cotopata  - up and down mountains we
drove and finally to a small alley and into a little house which was
decorated with streamers and balloons and football trophies, and naked
girly calenders..it was lovely to see Juana (the woman who came to the
Fair trade launch in Hatten Garden and cried with such emotion when
she spoke of how this certification was effecting their lives) and the
whole team - we swapped by piles of cash for a beautiful lump of gold
- which I walked out forgetting and Juana had to run after me - I
shoved that in my pocket and we headed to see Javier - the goldsmith -
we spent a hilarious few hours discussing a new collection, the
aesthetics, size, feel etc all without a language in common - a
perfect understanding..



Tomorrow I go to the mine about 2 hours away and thank goodness it is
considered inauspicious for women to enter the mine as I suffer
claustrophobia - but will be great to see. It is down in a more
tropical zone and a mile walk through the forest to the mine .. I will
let you know all tomorrow xx

Friday, 11 February 2011

The last truly free humans on the planet?

 A beautiful and important piece of film of an uncontacted tribe in Brazil that has been threatened by loggers -



see the full size film from survival   http://www.uncontactedtribes.org/brazilfootage

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Kabul: Turquoise Mountain Project. day two


Kabul: Turquoise Mountain.

I have enjoyed being back with the men at the workshop today, they are poetic, respectfully flirtatious, full of stories and jokes and teasing. Always a delight to spend time with them. 
Started new designs ... 
Went to the old bazaar which is fascinating, all the faces,Uzbek, Turkman Panshir, etc all in turbans, hats and heavy shawls, making bread, iron mongers, wooden tool makers, fruit and vegetables many men with no arms ar legs from the wars. Beautiful children .. 

The work the foundation has done is remarkable, womens clinic, the only medical centre for 60,000 people in the huge slum, school, employed and trained 400 people a day from the community. 
It looks amazing, real clay paint, wood carving earth architecture with courtyards and balconies for schools, workshops, offices, meeting rooms, libraries, all painfully restored, or built new in old style, great to see after I saw for the first time about 4 years ago, now finished!

Only a few internationals left here, and work of foundation is really done. 
Great to see how much money the jewellery brings in to help all this. 
Its surprisingly half a million dollers last year!

Went to get some silks today to make with the jewellery .. Lovely colours 


Had another bad night,  anxiety attack for some reason.......

Now the call to prayers from all the mosques around, and dog barking, the low helicopters and occasional bang of gun fire, but oddly........ peaceful 

Lots of love x P

Kabul: To work with turquoise Mountain

Nose pressed against the window of the plane peering out at the shades of browns and undulating hills and bare mountains, valleys with narrow parched looking rivers and snow laying in patches.

The air was sharp and cold but the sun warming and I was collected and driven to the Fort by Haun.

The pomegranate trees are bare and look a little sad, but it is good to be here and lovely to see all the people who work here, from cooks to guards and the small team of internationals still here.

After a dinner and long talk about the project and where the work is going etc I collapsed into bed and was heavy with tiredness. There is a simple and effective heating which is a large drum with a pipe and you put in saw dust and it burns slowly for about 6 hours. I late mine and crawled under all the blankets with sweaters and shawls wrapped around me and curled into a tight ball. I fell asleep quickly. At about 1am I was feeling drugged and tire but my throat was burning and eyes streaming I woke and was totally confused the smoke was so thick in the room that I could not see my hand in front of my face, and my heart was racing and I felt sick. I couldn't breath. I got up and managed to find the door and get out and get some air - eventually I had to go back in and break open the sealed windows and let the freezing air in and smoke out. It seems the pipe chimney thing had come loose and was pumping the smoke into the room. If I had not woken then for sure i would have been found dead this morning.

I did not sleep much after that! the fort is over 10 years old, all wood, mud, and woven straw ceilings – simply fire trap........

Working with Javid and the men today although it is the opening of parliament today so expecting riots and violence so have not been allowed out yet…….
Sending love