Jagga polishes a replica of an elephant shaped from marble. Once a seasoned artisan, Jagga now finds employment only seasonally
“Customers want the dark green Pakistani onyx,” explains Masih. “We are forced to work with the multi-green onyx and that doesn’t sell as much.”
Meanwhile, expenses have risen manifolds. The high-quality English sandpaper used for chiselling rough edges used to cost four rupees; today it is available at 40 rupees.
“We now use the local paper which costs us 25 rupees,” says Masih.
“The prices for the blades have increased too,” chimes in Javed, one of Masih’s employees. “They [exporters] blackmail us into negotiating a lower rate for work. They know we are desperate for money.”
Away from the workshops, I walk into Jawed’s small showroom that is lined with assorted onyx and marble products. While waiting for his visa, he scrolls through WeChat on his smartphone checking for updates on future trade fairs in China. After Kunming, he plans to exhibit at the Shijiazhuang International Trade City. That is, if he is able to sell off his consignment at Kunming.
“It is a hit-and-miss attempt,” says Jawed. “Sometimes we hit a sixer, sometimes we don’t.”
This belies the general mechanics in how businessmen approach the handicrafts sector today. Now limited to China, previously they had access to markets in the Middle East, Russia and India. That access was shut down due to the turbulent conditions in the Middle East, Russia’s strained relations with Ukraine and Pakistan’s spiky relationship with India.
“About 60 percent of our products would be bought by the Russians,” says Rehman Memon, another exhibitor and exporter entrenched in the business since the last six years. “And they are fond of the multi-dark green variety. The lesser-graded products would be sold in the Middle East.”
But things changed once Pakistan lost access to these markets.
“After we were squeezed out from elsewhere, we began to look at Chinese markets,” says Memon. “And since business relations with the Chinese are on friendlier terms [visa access is easier], everyone’s focus has switched to China.”
Meanwhile, back in Saddar Cooperative, shopkeepers remain reluctant about talking too much about marble. It is almost as if this is a topic that still hurts like a sore wound — after all, many businesses were run and made profits by exclusively selling marble by-products. None of it exists anymore. Many downsized and sold of their marble products, others introduced plastic and consumer items and some like Siddique Memon shut down their shops, sold them and moved to Pak Colony.
“Today the size of the marble handicrafts industry is less than one percent,” says Memon ruefully. “Earlier, it was the primary source of income for exhibitors and exporters in this industry. Now, it is their secondary source and many are either switching or diversifying income sources.”
The writer tweets @_basilandrews
Published in Dawn, EOS, November 12th, 2017