SME Times News Bureau | 21 Jun, 2020
Seeking to restore
the lost glory of the once-most famous pottery of Pokhran, a small town in
Jaisalmer district of Rajasthan where India conducted its 1st nuclear test, the
Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) today distributed 80 electric
potter wheels to 80 potter families in Pokhran.
Pokhran rich
heritage in terracotta products. Pokhran has over 300 potters’ families that
are engaged with pottery for several decades, but potters started looking for
other avenues due to heavy drudgery in the work and no market support.
Apart from the
electric wheels, the KVIC also distributed 8 blunger machines in a group of 10
potters, used for mixing the clay which can produce 800 kg clay in just 8
hours. Manually it takes 5 days to prepare 800 kg mud for pottery making.
KVIC has created
350 direct employment in the village. All 80 potters who were given 15 days
training by KVIC came up with some exquisite pottery.
The products
ranged from Kulhar to decorative pieces like flower vase, sculptures and
interesting traditional utensils like spherical bottles with narrow mouth,
Lotas with long spouts, and other spherical utensils used for cooking as well
as decorative pieces.
The potters
brilliantly depicted the “Swacch Bharat Abhiyan” and “International Yoga Day” –
through their pottery art. Incidentally, it also coincided with the International
Yoga Day being celebrated on Sunday.
After distributing
the electric chaak and other equipment through video conference, KVIC Chairman
Shri Vinai Kumar Saxena said the exercise is aligned with the Prime Minister’s
call for “Aatmanirbhar Bharat” and strengthening of potters aimed at creating
self-employment while also reviving the dying art of pottery.
“Pokhran was till
now only known as the site of nuclear tests but very soon the exquisite pottery
will be the new identity of this place.
The main objective
of Kumhar Sashaktikaran Yojana is to bring back the potters’ community to the
mainstream. By providing potters with modern equipment and training, we are
trying to reconnect them with the society and revive their art,” Saxena said.
The KVIC Chairman
has also instructed the State Director of KVIC in Rajasthan to facilitate
marketing and sale of the pottery products at Barmer and Jaisalmer railway
stations to provide marketing support to potters. “Pokhran is one of the
aspirational districts identified by the Niti Ayog. 400 railway stations
selling eatables only in earthen/terracotta pots include Jaisalmer and Barmer,
the two major railheads in Rajasthan that are closest to Pokhran.
The state KVIC
unit will facilitate the sale of their pottery at these railway stations given
the high tourist footfall in these cities,” Saxena said.
Notably, the KVIC
has launched Kumhar Sashaktikaran Ypjana in several remote areas in states like
Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra,
J&K, Haryana, West Bengal, Assam, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Telangana
and Bihar.
In Rajasthan, more
than a dozen districts including Jaipur, Kota, Jhalawar and Sri Ganganagar have
been benefited by the program.
Under the scheme,
the KVIC also provides equipment like blunger and pug mills for mixing clay for
making pottery products. The machines have eliminated drudgery from the process
of pottery making and resulted in higher income of potters by 7 to 8 times.