Brass hookah-making battling for survival
More than 200 years old tradition of making brass hookah, in northwestern Indian village of Balaheri in Rajasthan is dying a slow death. The village once famous for its specially produced brass hookahs is now fighting a battle for survival. According to legends, a local chieftain Raja Nagte Singh commissioned this community of artisans to make brass items.
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Balaheri: More than 200 years old tradition of making brass
hookah, in northwestern Indian village of Balaheri in
Rajasthan is dying a slow death.
The village once famous for its specially produced brass
hookahs is now fighting a battle for survival.
According to legends, a local chieftain Raja Nagte Singh
commissioned this community of artisans to make brass items.
Over a period of time their handiwork gained popularity
encouraging the subsequent generations to venture into the
business of making hookahs.
Once a flourishing business has today only a few families
engaged in this tradition. Most of them either migrated to
other places or joined other professions for survival.
According to the artisans, the machine-made hookahs that
are cheaper in terms of labour and time has deprived them
of their livelihood. "This art has become expensive due to automation that has made the machine made hookah cheaper. We cannot afford the
expensive machinery available. A few tribes like Thater,
who make beautiful hookahs, are rarely seen making hookahs.
Many of them migrated to some other place, engaged in other
activities to sustain their families," said Deepchand
Bariva, an artesian struggling to make a living by making
hookahs.
Artisans make hookahs of various shapes and sizes like vase
shaped, a bird atop a hookah and rectangular shaped hookahs.
Lack of demands and exposure to outside market are some of
the major hurdles for the survival of these artisans.
"We face the problem of lack of transportation, regular
supply of electricity is not there, the raw materials like
brass and pipes have become very expensive and the end
product has become expensive. The customers are not buying
it and we are not able to make a proper living on it," said
Dalchand another struggling artisan who intends to change
his profession.
Even though the market price of these hookahs is around
$539.84, the artisans are not able to gain much as they
have to depend on middlemen to sell their ware, who pocket
a lion’s share of the profit.
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