HomeNewsTrendsTunisian weavers turn socks, jeans, old pullovers into eco-friendly rugs

Tunisian weavers turn socks, jeans, old pullovers into eco-friendly rugs

The association pays the women not in cash but in post office accounts where their husbands can't see how much they are making -- or use it to pay household bills.

April 17, 2022 / 18:53 IST
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A shopkeeper arranges rugs woven by women in the southwestern Tunisian oasis of Nefta, at a shop run by Shanti, a social enterprise that helps artisans from across the North African country, in the capital Tunis, on April 15, 2022.
A shopkeeper arranges rugs woven by women in the southwestern Tunisian oasis of Nefta, at a shop run by Shanti, a social enterprise that helps artisans from across the North African country, in the capital Tunis, on April 15, 2022.

Najet unravels an old pair of jeans, raw material for a designer carpet: traditional, eco-friendly crafts are being adapted for new markets thanks to a project born in the Tunisian desert.

"I learned to weave at a young age, from my mother," said the 52-year-old from the oasis town of Nefta, 500 kilometres south of Tunis.

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Now, she is making a living from it.

She is selling her Turkish-style kilim rugs via Shanti, a social enterprise that helps artisans from across the North African country reach buyers and bring vital revenue into some of its most marginalised communities.