Kottayam: Kerala festival of Onam brings memories of Keralites wearing Kodi (new dresses), usually traditional handwoven dhotis and sarees, relishing on the Onasadhya (a feast) after making a Pookkalam (floral carpet) in their courtyards and celebrating the harvest festival with pomp and fervour.
This time, with the COVID pandemic spread and the subsequent regulations, Onam has lost the festive charm and people cannot go out to buy Onakkodi. The weavers’ and their families who had been hand weaving cloths in view of sale during Onam are badly hit.
There are many families who rely on their traditional occupation of weaving, for livelihood in Kottayam district of Kerala. The harvest festivals of Onam and Vishu in Kerala are the major revenue generating seasons for these weavers. However, this year, Vishu season was also grim and hardly had any sales due to the COVID 19 lockdown.
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The weavers were eagerly looking forward to the Onam festive season’s sales and hoping that the COVID’s grip will be relaxed by August. It only worsened though, shattering the weavers’ hopes for good sales during Onam to sustain themselves. COVID has proven disastrous for the weavers.