Oct 19, 2016

reWoven reVisited: Azerbaijani Carpets in Georgia

Zenura Budako, a 73-year-old carpet weaver in the ethnic Azeri village of Kosalar who has woven carpets for 50 years, Georgia © Onnik James Krikorian 2016

After putting together a short report on reWoven, a sustainable development project to revive and support the tradition of hand weaving carpets among Georgia’s largest ethnic minority, a year ago for BBC Azeri, I returned last week to do another report, but this time in English for Meydan TV.

reWoven is a project of the Millennium Relief and Development Services and Caucasus Hope Partnership to revive and support the tradition of hand-woven carpet weaving in Georgia’s ethnic Azeri community, a practice otherwise in decline among the country’s largest ethnic minority in the country.

 

Its director, Ryan Smith, has previously run a rug weaving project in Azerbaijan to preserve local tradition and to create income opportunities for ethnic Lezgin women. In 2011, he moved to Georgia.

 

Although not all of the profit goes to the weavers directly, they do receive 50-100 percent more income than before, which has led to an increase in the number of women hand – weaving carpets. reWoven also intends not only to invest profit into the weavers, but also into their villages. A school in one village, for example, was renovated.

 

Onnik James Krikorian interviewed Ryan Smith in the ethnic Azeri village of Kosalar in Southern Georgia.

 

reWoven’s website is at http://www.rewoven.net.

Tbilisoba 2024

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Earlier this month, Tbilisi celebrated Tbilisoba, the city’s annual harvest festival. Over the years it has changed significantly and seems smaller than before. I first covered the event in 2011 but the best so far remains 2014 when there was more representation of traditional Georgian folk dance and music as well as by ethnic minorities such as the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities. This year, that was held relatively far away from Tbilisi’s Old Town and Rike Park with very little publicity or in some media any at all. Nonetheless, those that attended appeared to enjoy themselves sufficiently and I managed to photo stories.

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Can Armenia and Azerbaijan finally reach an agreement by COP29?

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As this year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference in Baku draws closer, negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan appear to be drifting further apart. Despite hopes that the opposite would be true, a lack of clarity and confusion instead continues to reign. Does the draft Agreement on Peace and Establishment of Interstate Relations contain 17 points or 16? Initially, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had announced that consensus had been reached on 13 points while 3 were partially agreed and there was no agreement at all on a fourth.

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