Tag: Fair Trade

  • Transformative Fair Trade Relationships

    Transformative Fair Trade Relationships

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    April 2023

    Transformative Relationships: the Foundation of Fair Trade

    I remember clearly the day, many years ago, that I pasted the word “relationship” above Sarah’s desk in her office. That’s what Ganesh Himal Trading is about, I said, deep, lasting, transformative relationships. The past month has brought that to the fore more than ever.

    My trip to Nepal was all about the transformative power of deep and long-lasting relationships. As I sat with families and colleagues, many of whom I have worked with for almost four decades, I witnessed again the skill with which they have navigated their lives, nurtured their communities, and how they have forged the deep love and respect we have for one another.

    I met with my primary mentor, Meera Bhattarai, who founded the Association for Craft Producers (one of the most impactful Fair Trade groups I have ever encountered). We relived so much of what we have been through these past 38 years. We have built workshops, hosted artisans, designed countless products, funded an endowment for girls’ education, created college scholarships, and so much more. I was with her when we walked through IKEA, and she sighed heavily and said, “How can we compete” and cried when she wrote a stunning recommendation for our son Cameron when he applied for (and received) the Watson fellowship. She’s just retired from her role as Executive Director but knows her, and our work together is not done. She’s passed her ED role on to Revita Shrestha, another amazing woman who I have known and worked with for 28 years, so the relationship there continues.

    I sat with Kamala Giri, who I have also known for almost four decades, and her daughter, who was in the nursery at Bhaktapur Craft Printers when we worked together there. She spoke of how she had no power in the household when she married. She even had to give birth to her first daughter, who was breech, without help and then forced to clean it up afterward. Now through her amazing tenaciousness and, as she reflected, through our long-term buying of her beautiful paper items, this daughter is now a pharmacist, another a dental assistant, and her 3rd is a nurse. Along with all of that, she has been re-elected with more than 90% of the vote to represent her district in Bhaktapur for another five-year term with the message of empowering women.

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    Denise Attwood, Kesang Drokpatsang, Nilam Poudel

    These stories happened day after day, and each day, my heart was bursting. I wish I could share with you each and every story, each and every moment. Our Ganesh Himal colleagues have such rich lives, and what they have done with their opportunity has powerfully impacted the lives of so many others, particularly women. They are here to stay, and their impact will live on forever.

    But quickly, I also have to mention that I get to wear another hat in Nepal. That of Conscious Connections Foundation. That hat led me to deepen my relationships with CCF’s partners there. One of those partners, Nilam Poudel, is highlighted in a story below. But I have to tell you that meeting Nilam, a trans-gendered Nepali woman who has helped so many marginalized people in Nepal, was a profound moment in my life. Walking In and being embraced by this beautiful woman full of love, confidence, and strength, hearing her story and her dreams for others, literally blew me away. I had to ask her how she stayed so strong and positive in the face of all she had been through, and her response was, “I have come so close to death and have felt so much hunger and suffering that I no longer fear what will happen, and that allows me to work harder for those I love. I advise my community to use it as a tool if you have a weakness; it will make you stronger”.

    And finally, because I was in Nepal, I wasn’t able to attend the Fair Trade Conference, but Sarah did, and she reflected on how amazing it was to be surrounded by all of our wonderful Fair Trade community. She, too, recounted stories of relationships! She talked with Dick Meyer of Traditions and heard the stories of how we all started to work together so long ago; she ate tacos with Julio of Zee Bee, finally got to meet Tekia in person, shared time with Amy from Peacecraft and Jennie from Bunyaad and so much more. The relationships we have formed and are forming with our customers and colleagues in the Fair Trade world are equally as rich and transformative as those we have in Nepal. This work and these relationships are also here to stay! How cool is that?

    And one more great thing about this month (this month has been a big one) my dear partner in GHT and CCF, Austin, just gave birth to her second beautiful daughter, Chloe May (the reason she wasn’t in Nepal or at the FTF conference). So we welcome yet another little Ganeshee on this journey of life.

    Last but definitely not least, we worked on over 150 new products from all of our different groups. You will see these highlighted in this newsletter and in the months to come, but please check out our catalog section titled 2023 New arrivals-May to order.

    Each day I was in Nepal was a gift of reflection and anticipation. Reflecting with everyone on the pathway that no one thought was possible and anticipating all the creative, lasting change-making yet to come. We are knitting ourselves together through our relationships and through our caring. This is long-term, transformational work and happens only because of the deep bonds we carry for one another.

    Namaste,

    Denise Attwood
    Co-Owner of Ganesh Himal Trading

    PS I promise you in days to come to write more of these stories!

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    We are lucky, those of us in Fair Trade, we get to see, every day, through the eyes of others around the world whose cultures are very different from ours. We get to engage in diversity and learn about different visions of how humans engage in the world and with nature. I find that so nurturing but I am constantly challenged to lay down my western conditioning and allow for their perspective and deep knowledge to filter in and change me.

    People often say to me, “you have done so much for Nepal,” to which my only response is, “and they have done so much for us.” The folks we work with in Nepal have changed how I walk in the world. They have allowed me to be more fluid, more accepting and more present in the moment. From a Western perspective work in Nepal can be frustrating at times as weddings, festivals, planting fields and time for mourning don’t always fall into our shipment schedules or even seasons of selling. But amazingly, the work all gets done and life is allowed to dominate instead of timelines. This is the beauty that has been shared with me. And for that, I am incredibly grateful.

    I have, through these past 35+ years working in Nepal, watched as Westerners have come in and tried to set up small “factories” with a 9-5 schedule to “help” Nepalis by giving them “work”. I have seen many of these attempts fail in a flurry of frustration on both sides. I’ve tried to explain that there are rhythms in Nepal that need to be respected and honored. They are far from “lazy” or “not committed to work”. They instead understand the balance of combining family, spiritual and cultural needs with work. Letting the rhythm happen while working together requires trust and knowing that they understand what they need to be whole. There is a deeper process at work than just coming to do a “job.” Forcing them into a Western perspective of “work first” then “life” doesn’t work in these ancient and rich cultures. We can learn a lot from that rhythm.

    I just finished reading a great book called “Sandtalk-How Indigenous Thinking Can Save The World” by Aboriginal scholar Tyson Yunkaporta where he addresses so much of this. He exposes how in the West, we often go into solving a problem by “doing” before understanding and before respecting the deep relationships and cultural knowledge that exist and need to be honored before we even begin to act. My experience in Nepal continually teaches me how true this is. I believe that one aspect of the success of our business has been because we have listened and learned and connected deeply with those we work with before taking action.

    This is all to say that as we engage in the “work” of Fair Trade we need to constantly be reminded to step back and learn from our partners and understand that our Western way of being in the world is only one perspective. We are fortunate to have the opportunity to learn the richness of connection through our maker partners each day. If we are open to their teachings and wisdom, it can carry us into a much more connected and community-oriented, a more “life” oriented way of being in the world and hopefully one that is more sustainable for all.

    Thanks for being a part of our community!
    Namaste, Denise

    Tyson Yunkaporta’s protocol, from an indigenous perspective, when approaching an issue is as follows:

    · First: RESPECT- “this is aligned with values and protocols of introduction setting rules and boundaries. This is the work of your spirit, your gut”
    · Second: CONNECT-“is about establishing strong relationships and routines of exchange that are equal for all…This is the work of the heart”
    · Third: REFLECT- “is about thinking as part of the group and collectively establishing a shared body of knowledge to inform what you will do. This is the work of the head”
    · Finally comes the doing: DIRECT- “is about acting on that shared knowledge in ways that are negotiated by all. This is the work of the hands.”

    It is his feeling that “community and connection over individualism and fragmentation-and cultivating respect for the land-can address the urgent challenges we face.”

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    Featured Artisan: Padhma Creations

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    Padhma Creation’s Story

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]It almost seems too simple: a skein of wool saving a life.  For women of Nepal, beaten down by a complex and consuming social status, wool is a welcome reality.

    IMG_5300-300x225Hasroon is one of these women.  Hasroon was married at 18 and living a happy life with her infant son and husband . . . until her in-laws began demanding dowry money.  When Hasroon’s family couldn’t pay, she was beaten, humiliated, and ultimately covered with gasoline, pushed into the bathroom, and set on fire. Today, Hasroon works for Padhma Creations, a social enterprise founded by Kesang Yudron.   Padhma is the Sanskrit word for lotus, the flower that emerges pure and white from the muddy swamp.  Kesang believes it is a fitting symbol for the women artisans, like Hasroom, who work at Padhma Creations.  Padhma Creations gives Hasroon the training and job she needs to provide a secure and supportive life for her and her son.

    Padhma Creations partners with women from neighboring villages of Nepalgunj, Bardiya, and Surkhet in Nepal.  Wool is divided among their families who then make berets, scarves, socks, and other items in their homes or in shelters for women without homes. These woolens are then sold, and the money reinvested in programs to support the artisans and their children.  Kesang thought of the idea in 2000 when she and her father visited Nepalgunj, a border town between Nepal and India.

    “I remember being shocked at the sight of a 13-year-old village girl being rescued from trafficking by the police,” Kesang said. “The story was that a distant relative of hers had intentions of selling her to a brothel in Mumbai. This incident created a lasting and profound impression on my life.”

    Thousands of young Nepali women are trafficked to India every year for prostitution, child labor, and slavery, Kesang said.
    Others are victims of domestic abuse.  All have no jobs or paying skills. “Padhma Creations not only helps these women but saves their families from a life of spiraling poverty. [In addition,] we want to raise awareness about the lives of people in other countries,” Kesang said. “Our hope is to influence a new generation of empathetic young adults  who will be socially conscious consumers.”

    Or, like Kesang, they’ll become entrepreneurs investing in human life worldwide.

    -Article from St. Benedicts College

    [/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”2_3″ last=”no” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_text]In addition to providing above market wages for the women, Padhma aims to provide women artisans with health, education and social welfare programs.  And so, since 2011, Ganesh Himal Trading has contributed $1.00 for every item made by the group to a Worker Development Fund.  A Worker’s Development Fund is a social benefit package which compliments already existing fair wages and steady employment. The money that is set aside gives women in the group the chance to decide how that money can be used to create additional financial support for the artisan group as a whole. Since 2011 the women have chosen to use a portion of the funds to provide scholarships for their children.  Originally, these scholarships were prioritized for the women most in need, but as the fund grew the number of recipients grew and now, all of the children of Padhma knitters are on scholarship (49 children as of 2015).  In 2015 alone, Ganesh Himal contributed $6,345.  Additional funds have been used for medical expenses, funeral costs and family emergencies.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_3″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_imageframe lightbox=”no” lightbox_image=”” style_type=”none” hover_type=”none” bordercolor=”” bordersize=”0px” borderradius=”0″ stylecolor=”” align=”none” link=”” linktarget=”_self” animation_type=”0″ animation_direction=”down” animation_speed=”0.1″ hide_on_mobile=”no” class=”” id=””] [/fusion_imageframe][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]Artisan Spotlights[/fusion_title][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_2″ last=”no” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]

    Radika Zenda

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]Radika is 34 years old and has been knitting for 3 years. She was introduced to the shelter project by friends in the neighborhood. Her income from knitting helps send her son to school since her husband does not support the family. In addition to knitting, she raises chickens.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_2″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]

    Meera Balmiki

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]DSCN0418-2Meera is the master knitter at Padhma Creations. She travels to Kathmandu to learn the pattern from Pemala and then she trains the other knitters. At age 35, she has 1 brother who paid his own way through college, and 3 sisters, all of whom finished high school. Because of a tumor in her leg, Meera is unable to use a sewing machine, so she relies on her knitting skills to support herself and her family.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_2″ last=”no” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]

    Kesang Yudron

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]DSCN0347-2Kesang Yudron first visited Nepalgunj as a high school student when her father wanted to train women of the area to knit.  A typical teenager, Kesang didn’t think much of the experience at the time.  After completing her accounting degree in Minnesota and working in a cubicle for a large company, however, she realized that she would rather serve her home community.   Inspired by the story of a 13 year old village girl being rescued from trafficking by the police in Nepagunj, Kesang founded Padhma Creations to provide women artisans with employm[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_2″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]

    Dhana Visht

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]Meera is the master knitter at Padhma Creations. She travels to Kathmandu to learn the pattern from Pemala and then she trains the other knitters. At age 35, she has 1 brother who paid his own way through college, and 3 sisters, all of whom finished high school. Because of a tumor in her leg, Meera is unable to use a sewing machine, so she relies on her knitting skills to support herself and her family.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_title size=”1″ content_align=”left” style_type=”default” sep_color=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]

    A Small Sample of Padhma Creations Knitwear

    [/fusion_title][fusion_text]

    See all of Padhma Creation’s Knits Here>

    (you must be logged-in to view)

    [/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_images picture_size=”auto” hover_type=”none” autoplay=”no” columns=”4″ column_spacing=”6″ scroll_items=”” show_nav=”yes” mouse_scroll=”no” border=”yes” lightbox=”yes” class=”” id=””][fusion_image link=”” linktarget=”_self” image=”https://dev.ganeshhimaltrading.com/wp-content/uploads/Copy-of-Copy-of-Copy-of-Copy-of-PAPER-SALE-7.jpg” alt=””/][fusion_image link=”” linktarget=”_self” image=”https://dev.ganeshhimaltrading.com/wp-content/uploads/Copy-of-Copy-of-Copy-of-Copy-of-PAPER-SALE-14.jpg” alt=””/][fusion_image link=”” linktarget=”_self” image=”https://dev.ganeshhimaltrading.com/wp-content/uploads/Copy-of-Copy-of-PAPER-SALE-1.jpg” alt=””/][fusion_image link=”” linktarget=”_self” image=”https://dev.ganeshhimaltrading.com/wp-content/uploads/Untitled-design-751.png” alt=””/][/fusion_images][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • Happy Doshain

    Happy Doshain

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ class=”” id=””][fusion_text]

    weavinghand

     

    copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-paper-sale-62Fall is a time of great celebration in Nepal and a time when families & friends come together, work is put aside and they celebrate life and the ties that bind them. It is one of the most beautiful times of the year to be in Nepal and their month of festivals are a huge reminder that it is a gift to be here in this life and to have the blessings of those who have come before us.Flowers are everywhere and ultimate joy is in the air, the difficulties of life are left behind and gratitude prevails.

    In North America we enter the fall season in a different way! A huge sense of anticipation and angst emerges as we gear up for our own holiday seasons and this year for the U.S. elections.  Somehow it seems draining and difficult on so many levels. I want this issue of our newsletter to bring you the sense of Nepali joy and celebration so that we can remember that even in the busiest and most divisive of times we can step back and celebrate that we are part of an amazing human family and lucky for us we are part of an amazing Fair Trade family as well.

    It always brings a huge smile to my face to think about how lucky we are to be a part of the Fair Trade family, one that has religious differences, political differences, racial differences, all kinds of differences but one where we have at our common core a sense that everyone on the planet should be treated with love and respect and given the chance at a healthy and stable life.

    So I hope that you can also leave the everyday difficulties of life behind, find joy in the air and join our Nepali friends in celebration of happiness & our common human bond.

    -Denise & all the Ganeshees[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_text]

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  • Back to School Fair Trade Style 2015

    Denise Attwood
    Co-Owner
    This is the time of year when we in North America think “back to school”.  There’s a bit of excitement in the air as we anticipate minds filling with new ideas and dreams of a brighter world to come.  I have been thinking a lot about education of late as we delve deeply into learning about earthquake relief and the best way to distribute resources to those who are in grave need. I think about the learning required to rebuild lives and yet carry on tradition; the learning behind how to work with partners who are suffering great loss but who must still strive to support themselves and their families. Once again I am brought back to the importance of relationships and how it is through interaction and love for each other that we learn and accomplish the most.
    In the past few months since the earthquakes we have allocated resources to many of our producer partners through both Ganesh Himal Trading and through the Conscious Connections Foundation’s Artisan relief fund.  We have watched as these funds have been put directly into people’s hands and used to provide monetary relief, emergency food, tin for roofs, tarps, medicine and more. These resources were provided to directly address the self declared needs of those affected by the earthquake.  Having up to 30 year long relationships with the individuals dispersing these funds and knowing that we could trust their judgment has helped us learn and further appreciate how listening to your friends and trusting them to control resources results in amazing accomplishments. People are now beginning to rebuild and restore, and, in order to catalyze this process, as you have seen through our recent shipments, they are getting back to work.
    We are poised to learn more in the months to come as Ric, myself, and our son Cameron together with his friend Grant travel to Nepal, at our own

    Food and supplies delivered to Baseri, Nepal after the earthquake

    expense, to explore further how CCF and GHT funds have been used, evaluate their effect, learn about how to do it better and discuss with our partners in Nepal the next best steps in moving toward permanent rebuilding and what our role in that can be. We will spend a month visiting the villages and producers who received relief as well as talk with the village council in Baseri about the rebuilding of the clinic there. Then Cameron and Grant, taking a bridge year before they head to college, will spend the next 2 months looking at other small, medium and large scale aid to try to learn about what worked best and where.  Follow along by visiting the Conscious Connections Website. They will be writing a blog on our findings and we’ll post that on the CCF and GHT Facebook pages as well. This is a huge learning curve and you can be right there learning with us!

    Just as there is a need to restructure the trading system through relationship, partnering and Fair Trade, we believe that as the world deals increasingly with disaster we must learn to restructure the “aiding system” as well. It is imperative that we begin the discussion about relationship in aid, learning from those on the ground who we believe have much to teach us.

     

    Thank you for all of your help!
    Denise

     

  • Fair Trade Legacy-Spokesman Review

    Fair Trade Legacy-Spokesman Review

    May 31, 2015 in City

    Fair trade legacy

    Ganesh Himal Trading stands behind Nepal
    Michael Guilfoil Correspondent

    Jesse Tinsley photoBuy this photo

    Denise Attwood and her husband, Ric Conner, operate an importing business specializing in handcrafts from Nepal from their rural home south of Spokane.
    (Full-size photo)

    Five facts

    • Business started:  1984

    • Employees: six (including two owners)

    • Customers: 250 fair trade stores throughout U.S. and Canada

    • Range of products: from $1 cloth bags to $130 sweaters

    • More info:www.ganeshhimaltrading .com; (509) 448-6561

    Denise Attwood says running a small business demands the ability to switch direction “like a hummingbird” as circumstances suddenly change.

    In the case of Ganesh Himal Trading, the company she and her husband, Ric Conner, started 31 years ago, abrupt changes have included a civil war and devastating earthquakes. That’s because Attwood and Conner import their inventory from Nepal.

    Normally they receive three tons of handcrafted clothing, jewelry, textiles and paper every two months. Now they’re scrambling to fill orders while also coordinating relief efforts for their network of cottage-industry artisans who no longer have cottages.

    The Spokane couple also plan to rebuild the remote medical clinic they helped fund in 2008.

    During a recent interview, Attwood described how she and her husband nurtured the fair trade movement in Nepal, and how people here can help it continue to thrive.

    S-R: What were your interests growing up in Spokane?

    Attwood: Social justice. My dad, Wayne Attwood, was head of Physicians for Social Responsibility here, so I was involved with PSR and the Peace and Justice Action League, as well as programs for developmentally disabled people.

    S-R: What career did you envision for yourself?

    Attwood: Something in the environmental field. I started college at Wellesley, then switched to environmental science at Western Washington University, where I met Ric, an Alaska fisherman. Both he and I earned degrees in environmental science. But after graduation, I still had this social justice bent, so I decided to go to law school.

    S-R: When did you connect with Nepal?

    Attwood: Before I applied to law school, we took an eight-month trip through Asia and the South Pacific. While trekking in Nepal, we bought sweaters made by Tibetan refugees and were amazed by how well they performed in harsh conditions. When we complimented the family that made them, they said, “Do you know how we can market them?” They wanted to send their kids to good schools because they felt that was the only way they would ever get their country back. We didn’t know anything about marketing but agreed to try to find someone who did.

    S-R: And?

    Attwood: We bought some sweaters and socks and had them shipped home while we continued traveling. When we got back to Spokane six months later, my parents encouraged us to present a slide show of our trip and offer the things from Nepal for sale. We did, and people loved it – the items themselves, and the concept that these people were making them to send their children to school. We made enough money to send Ric back to Nepal while I started law school, and we began this crazy business. Each summer we’d hit a bunch of festivals, and during the school year Ric would go to campuses and do what he called “guerilla vending” – sell sweaters until someone told him to leave. If he sold even one sweater, we’d be so excited.

    S-R: What was the turning point?

    Attwood: After I finished law school and passed the bar, we decided this is the best social justice work we could do – working directly with people trying to create a livelihood for themselves. So we started doing this full time.

    S-R: How has the business evolved?

    Attwood: At first we were strictly retail – on the road 270 days a year doing fairs and festivals. I also became a board member of the fledgling Fair Trade Resource Network, an educational effort to help North Americans understand their impact as consumers. As the products improved and people began understanding fair trade, stores like Global Folk Art, which I co-founded, started to pop up. Coincidentally, our son was born and we needed to get off the road, so we gradually became a wholesale company.

    S-R: What did it cost to start Ganesh Himal Trading?

    Attwood: We bought our first inventory for $400.

    S-R: What’s your annual revenue now?

    Attwood: Around $900,000. Of that, we return about 52 percent to Nepal.

    S-R: Have you ever worried the business might fail?

    Attwood: It could fail any time if we can’t get product out of Nepal.

    S-R: How much did April’s earthquake and the aftershocks disrupt your supply line?

    Attwood: We’ll see. But small businesses teach you the lesson of impermanence. You have to be like a hummingbird – be able to change direction very quickly. You have to know not just what you do, but why you do it. And the why of what we do is very much about social justice, so it’s not like we’re going to walk away from it.

    S-R: How often do you travel to Nepal?

    Attwood: It depends. Our 18-year-old son has been seven times. Usually I go every other year, but I’m constantly helping our people there design products and choose colors. I aim for what I call “the Levi’s of goods” – things people like to buy over and over, or that last a long time. Our goods don’t appeal to everyone, but I think I have a pretty good idea of what our customers are looking for.

    S-R: How have styles changed?

    Attwood: When we started selling sweaters, fleece didn’t exist. Now all our sweaters are fleece-lined, because young people today aren’t used to wool next to their skin.

    S-R: What do you like most about your job?

    Attwood: I love the people I work with in Nepal. And I love our customers. Right after the earthquake, shops all over the country put jars out and sent us money along with messages like, “We collected $2,000 for earthquake victims, and we’re matching it.”

    S-R: How much have you raised?

    Attwood: As of (last week), about $125,000.

    S-R: Where will it go?

    Attwood: A lot of people we work with live in Kathmandu, but their family homes are in the villages that were hardest hit. So we’ve already sent them money to make sure their villages have rice and shelters. And our clinic was completely destroyed, so a portion of the money will go to rebuilding that.

    S-R: What can people in Spokane do?

    Attwood: One thing is to join us (at 10 a.m. today) at Riverside Place, the old Masonic Temple, for a 90-minute Zumbathon earthquake benefit, followed by raffles, healthy food and fair trade items for sale. We’re suggesting a $12 donation, with all money directly benefiting the Baseri Rural Health Clinic and community in Nepal.

    S-R: Anything else?

    Attwood: They can visit our website – www.ganeshhimaltrading.com – and choose where they want to direct their donations.

    S-R: Looking back, what has surprised you the most about your career?

    Attwood: Early on when we told people we had a fair trade import business, they looked at us like we were from Mars. Now they say, “Oh, that’s really great. My town has a fair trade store” or “I drink fair trade coffee.” The difference in just 30 years is phenomenal.

    S-R: What do you suppose your artisans would think of our lifestyle?

    Attwood: We took a good friend from Nepal to Costco once, and it was overwhelming. He looked around and said, “You need to stop developing and let the rest of us catch up.” I think he’s absolutely right.

    S-R: What advice would you offer someone considering a career as a fair trade importer?

    Attwood: Find a place that you love and fall in love with its people. If you do that, the hurdles will never feel too big.

    This interview has been edited and condensed. Freelance writer Michael Guilfoil can be reached via email at mguilfoil@comcast.net.

  • The Photograph We Didn’t Get

    By Candi Smucker

    In western Nepal is the town of Nepalgunj, it is located a couple of miles north of the border with India. This is were we flew on Thursday afternoon.

    The flight from Kathmandu was in a 30 passenger prop plane of some sort (yes, I know, not enough info for some of you). We were in the air about an hour and had been told to sit on the right hand side of the plane if at all possible. When I boarded Denise was already seated and had saved me a window seat for which I am eternally grateful. The view of the Himalayans was worth the entire price of the ticket. The full hour was panorama of one grand peak after another.

    Nepalgunj is a smallish town (population still to be determined, no one seemed to know) that is flat, hot and humid with the tiniest of airports about five miles out of town. If they have 8 flights a day I would be surprised. Kesang met us at the airport with a van, we loaded in with our overnight bags and off we sped to the hotel on the other side of Nepalgunj.

    Kesang is a twenty-something Tibetan who has started Padhma Creations, a group of knitters affiliated with a shelter for abused or trafficked women. Kesang went to college in Minnesota and has now returned to Nepal to carry on her family tradition of assisting the women of Nepal gain higher economic independence. More on the family in a later report from an earlier day, these reports are going to be quite out-of-order.DSC_0143

    The main road to the hotel is full, really full, of motorcycles, bicycles, horse-drawn platform taxis, little mini-mini passenger taxis, bicycle rickshaws, pedestrians, freight trucks coming in from India, goats, chickens, cows and children. Oh, and potholes.

    We made it quite nicely to the hotel, checked-in, dumped our stuff and headed off across the street to the shelter home for a quick visit. It was dusk and as we sat and chatted with a few of the women (Kesang was super translator) the mosquitoes also came to greet us. Of course in an attempt to pack light for our overnight trip no one had insect repellent. The local pharmacy seemed to be out so the ladies at the shelter proceeded to light egg cartons to create smoke to keep them at bay. I am a mosquito magnet so that wasn’t really necessary for the rest of the group but I appreciated it.

    Then it was back across the street for a leisurely dinner at the hotel. Leisurely because it took an hour and a half for the food to arrive. I suspect they had to call the cook back in for this large crowd of North American women. It was a tasty vegetarian buffet once it arrived, not what we had actually ordered but very satisfying. And the beer, pappadams and conversation kept us occupied until the food arrived.

    The first thing the next morning we hopped on bicycle rickshaws and headed south to the border. There were two of us per rickshaw which may have been half a person too many. The morning was sunny and bright, not yet too warm, a pretty good morning for a drive to the border and on a bicycle rickshaw you are right in the middle of all the action with good views of the passing countryside.

    At the border is an arch. That and the border patrol let you know you have arrived. All the traffic flows freely between the two countries with the border patrol stopping an occasional vehicle for a brief inspection. Kathy, Joan and I have multiple entry visas for India but opted not to go across as it would have taken some time to get our border stamp. Everyone but us could freely cross the border. And we kind of stand out in a crowd.

    We stopped to visit the woman who manages the office affiliated with the women’s shelter. Her job is to provide support and assistance to people found being trafficked into India for labor, sex or organs. With the relatively loose border inspections we asked how these women (and some children) were noticed. It seems there is a pretty good network of rickshaw and bus drivers who will clue her in if they suspect something isn’t right.

    After this visit it was back on the rickshaws for the trip back into Nepalgunj and a return to the shelter. By the time we arrived they were all at work, sitting around the yard knitting mittens and stockings. Some of the women are living at the shelter and need employment, others are community women in need of work to supplement meager family income who come to the shelter to knit though sometimes they also knit at home. None arrived as knitters and Kesang has brought several of them to Kathmandu to learn and then return to teach others. The orders received for their knits from Ganesh Himal and a few others still do not keep them employed full-time. As we interviewed them and asked if they had any questions for us the only thing we heard was a request to please place more orders. They knit a colorful Christmas stocking that has been a best-selling product for Ganesh Himal. Denise says her goal now is to find ways to double her sales of these stockings. What are we going to do about that?

    DSC_0118

    This was our first visit with bunches of children around so out came the books we had toted halfway around the world. I sat on the sidewalk by the swing set and we all read books together. I left the books with the shelter manager and hope they become well-worn.

    After lunch (we ordered earlier) it was off to visit at the homes of five or six of the knitters a short walk from the hotel and shelter. These are simple homes, often six or seven people to a room within a compound of extended family members. Children were all over the place wanting their pictures taken and giggling like crazy when they got to see them. They also grow mushrooms which was fun to see.

    Our return flight was scheduled to leave at 4:55. At 4:10 (you already see the problem here) the bright, shiny, black, chrome-covered SUV with fancy lights taxi pulls in to take us to the airport. Nine of us plus the driver sardine into the vehicle and pray for the driver to start the car so we can roll down the windows and breathe. Off we go, plenty of time. We wind our way S-L-O-W-L-Y through all those things on the roads listed above. Finally, we make it to the other of side of town where the traffic thins out, the pot-holes mostly cease and the driver can pick up speed. It is now 4:30. Just as the speed increases a flapping sound starts. The driver pulls over. I assume something is wrong with the luggage on top of the car. Wrong. The fan belt has broken. It is now 4:35 and he has called for a replacement fan belt. This is not going to work. Sarah springs to action. From the open window she hollers at a passing van that we need to get to the airport fast. The van flips around and pulls in along side. We all leap from the car, Sarah jumps up and throws down all the bags on the top, we grab them and pile into the waiting van. Denise passes a 500 rupee note to the first driver and dives into the second car. Austin, Kesang and I are in the very back seat facing backwards. As the new driver floors it Austin shouts thank you to the SUV driver and he turns to look at us with the fan belt in his hand and smile on his face standing in front of the SUV with the hood up and waves. It’s the picture we didn’t get.

    We are still about a mile from the airport. Read Candi’s next post to find out if we ever made it!

  • Power of 5 launched and Girls Scholarships get funded!

    While in Nepal in 2013, Ganesh Himal staff had the opportunity to meet with two recipients of the ACP Girl Child Education Fund, an girl scholarship fund at the Association for Craft Producers that Ganesh Himal has donated to for years. Sisters Heema, 16, and Heena, 10, had both received a scholarship for 3 years and loved school, but their scholarships were ending. Due to high demand for the program and lack of funds, ACP had to limit scholarships to no longer than 3 years for the children of their producers. Determined to extend Heema and Heena’s scholarships, we at Ganesh Himal each donated $5 with the dream that we could get 1000 people to do the same. The Power of 5 campaign was born.

    What can $5 do? It can buy you a coffee, or a hamburger. It can buy you a gallon of gas. Or, it can help a girl in Nepal attend school for 2 weeks. That means that for 10 days a young girl is reading, writing, learning with her friends, and stretching her imagination. What happens if she isn’t at school? She is three times more likely to be married before her 18th birthday. She stays at home, and the traditional cycle of exclusion that keeps girls disengaged from decision making continues. $5 helps a young girl battle the cycle of poverty.

    Now imagine if all of your friends gave $5. Then they asked all of their friends to donate $5? 10 friends donating $5 is a scholarship for one girl to go to school for 6 months! That’s a ripple–an ever-expanding body of people changing the lives of girls in Nepal. And the ripple doesn’t stop there. These girls each create their own ripples of change starting with their families, then their village, and even their country. When 10% more girls go to school, a country’s GDP increases an average of 3% according to the Council of Foreign Relations. That affects the world. The ripple is limitless, and it starts with $5. This is the Power of 5.

    Our goal is to sponsor at least 100 girls, or boys if in need, in Nepal for one more year of schooling through the ACP Child Education Fund. In order to do so, we need 2,000 people to donate $5. We’ve created beautiful bookmarks for you to use to collect donations. By asking for a $5 donation for each bookmark you place in your store, you not only help us reach our goal, but you start the discussion about why girls are such an amazing investment and about why they aren’t in school.

    There are two ways of creating a ripple:

    Personal Ripple– Place  bookmarks in your store and ask for a donation of $5 for each.Customers can get involved as individuals and feel good knowing that 100% of their donation is going towards the ACP Child Education Fund. Not only that, their donation is tax deductible through the Conscious Connections Foundation, a foundation started by the founders of Ganesh Himal Trading.

    Power of 5 Ripple

    Encourage friends/regular customers/community members to take a packet of bookmarks (either 5, 15, or 30) to distribute for donations amongst their friends. If each person finds 5 friends who turn around and find 5 friends, then through networking, the ripple multiplies by the power of 5. You can use your store as the collection point, creating community and exposing new people to the world of Fair Trade and girl’s education.

    Join the Power of 5 campaign today. Here’s how…

    1) Request a packet of bookmarks via the Ganesh Himal website. www.ganeshhimaltrading.com If you want to participate in the Power of 5 Ripple then order multiple smaller packets; if a personal Ripple better suits your store, then order one large packet.

    2) We will issue you an invoice for the number of bookmarks you want and send them with your next order.

    3) You gather donations for the bookmarks and write a check to Conscious Connections Foundation and send it to PO Box 342 Spokane WA  for the amount of donations gathered. Please put  “donation for Power of 5”  in the memo line. The Power of 5 is a project of the Conscious Connections Foundation which is a 501©3 nonprofit organization recognized by the IRS. EIN #:471602190 and all donations are tax deductible to the full extent of the law.

    4) CCF is all volunteer run and so is the program in Nepal so 100% of donations will go directly to sending children, who otherwise would not be able to attend, to school in Nepal. Our focus and priority is on sending girls to school but if girls are served and boys are in need we will sponsor them as well.  If each of us gives a little, it’s no longer pocket change but big change: JOIN THE POWER OF 5!

    Use these to generate donations for the scholarship fund AND raise awareness about the importance of educating girls!

  • Spokane City Forum, Reading, and Product of the Week

    Hello Blog Readers!

    It’s the newly established Ganesh Himal Trading Intern.

    Before I begin I want to share my excitement about a product I discovered while exploring the Ganesh Himal Trading inventory: the little felted elephant bags. They had caught my eye when I was browsing the website and during my tour of Ganesh Himal Trading. Between the adorable design and the story behind them, I couldn’t resist featuring them in my blog post. The design reminds me of a bag I had as a child, a horse purse, who was a stuffed animal with a zipper across the back and the bag compartment was his stomach. Adding to the whimsical design of these bags are some wonderfully unexpected color combinations. Long story short,  I may soon be walking out  with one of these bags for some young girls who live next door.

    The elephant bags are created by a group of crafters that was formed by a former employee of the Association for Craft Producers (ACP), Hari Basnet. Hari, with the help of ACP and Ganesh Himal Trading started his own business, and up until his recent death employed 15 women with steady work and fair wage. The women have been able to continue on carrying on his mission. I find his mission and commitment to women very admirable.

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    I had a fun time herding up some bags for this photo

    In addition to Hari Basnet, I also loved hearing the individual stories of producers from Denise at the Spokane City Forum on the 17th. The stories of the women are so empowering, how through their employment they have become strong and are now advocates for their communities. I hope to bring the same empowerment to women in my career. I was very excited to attend because my dad, who works at First Presbyterian Church, has been encouraging me for months to attend City Forums and I’m glad I finally received  the opportunity.  What I loved almost as much as I loved hearing Denise and Kim speak, was seeing how the audience reacted. They were completely hooked and when Denise passed around some examples of the products made from what was considered trash (tire innertubes and recycled billboards)–the audience was tickled. Each person examined the products with glee, smiles and whispers of admiration to their colleagues.

    After my first day I was given some reading to do, “An Overview of Fair Trade in North America” which gave the basics of Fair Trade: its history; its principles, importance, major names, challenges and personal impact. Everyone should read or a least skim through a copy. The pamphlet may not be every one’s cup of tea, I would say a lot fact based reading isn’t, but it gives a great overview of the subject including a conflict I found particularly interesting. The concern is over the emerging differences between certification guidelines.

    The overview mentioned the specific coffee and how different groups are now allowing hired labor and plantations to have their coffee certified. I would like to avoid becoming pessimistic but I believe caution should be taken to ensure there are guidelines. The typical consumer is most likely unaware of these differences. While this may be good for business and while I am not condemning organizations for altering guidelines to encourage larger companies and corporations to apply for certification to encourage the shift to fair trade practices, I am worried this could dilute the reputation of the fair trade, much like the USDA’s organic certification and corporations strategic use of phrases such as “100% natural”.

    All of this being said I fear preaching to the choir. What are your thoughts readers?

    Until next time,

    Lauren

    The Ganesh Himal Trading Intern[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • Meet Ganesh Himal’s First Intern!

    First Entry: October 15th


    Hello Blog Readers, my name is Lauren Merrithew. I am Ganesh Himal Trading’s first intern! I am a senior in high school and I am taking a class that partners me with an organization of my choice whom I than intern with for around 3 hours a week from the beginning of October to the end of May.
    I had a rather interesting way of becoming connected to Ganesh Himal. I was interviewing with another organization when the interviewer stopped me and said their organization wasn’t the place for me. I was shocked, wondering when in my description what I love and value went wrong before the interviewer smiling, sat me down and showed me the Ganesh Himal website that prominently featured aspects of their business that summarized everything I had mentioned in my interview with her.
    What I would like to do is become a fashion major and eventually start my own business, a business based on fair trade, empowering women, and sustainability.
    Ganesh Himal has been an incredible fit thus far and within the less than six hours I have been here I already feel at home. Their message, mission and process is genius—for lack of a better word–and I have learned so much already as to what it takes to run a fair trade minded business. And I am hooked.
    Already I have been exposed to Ganesh Himal’s incredible mindfulness towards the producer, which became evident within minutes of Denise elaborating on product design, including how designs are chosen for specific producer. Each one of their transactions with their producers is thoughtful, and because of their consciousness, Ganesh has been able to facilitate amazing change, which I love. (Read how Ganesh Himal helped build a Medical Clinic below if you haven’t already).
    I will be posting throughout my internship, sending updates on my experiences and what I am learning. I’m excited to see where this internship will take me.
    Until next time,
    Lauren Merrithew
    Ganesh Himal’s Elated Intern