Khag (Jammu and Kashmir):The famed traditional hand-made Kashmiri carpets are all set to adorn the new Parliament building in the national capital as artists in a remote village in Budgam district are in the final stages of completing the work. A group of 50 weavers and artisans in Khag in this central Kashmir district have been working for the last about a year to complete the project which was assigned to them by a New Delhi-based company.
The government has maintained that the Winter Session of Parliament will be held in the new building being built under the Narendra Modi government's ambitious Central Vista redevelopment project. We had received the order for 12 carpets from the company in October last year for carpets for the new Parliament building after we submitted the samples, Qamar Ali Khan of Tahiri Carpets told PTI.
Khan, whose family has been running the unit involved in making and exporting carpets for 32 years, said making carpets for the Parliament was an honour and a matter of immense happiness. This art of ours the hand-made carpets was famous the world over. But, unfortunately, there has been a decline due to many reasons. Now, we hope it gets revived and this project helps in that, he said.
The carpets to adorn the new Parliament building will be 11 feet long and up to 8 feet wide. They will be laid in a circular formation. The width of each carpet is not the same. It varies, it starts with less width and goes on to become bigger. But the minimum is four feet, Khan said. The carpets are unique and the three designs have been incorporated from the traditional Kashmiri Kani' shawl designs, he said.
Fifty weavers are working on the project and 12 families are associated with it right from supplying raw material, designing, weaving, etc, he said. Khan said over 90 per cent of the project work has been completed and the rest will take about another 20 days. The designing of the carpets took about three months and then the actual work started. We hope to finish this month.