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"We
want the girls who join our foundation to
be academically proficient and vocationally
independent. But it's tough making their
parents realise why they must send their
children to us," added Valaya.
Similarly,
stirred by the problem of child labour, Sunil Sethi, CEO Alliance
Merchandising Company, is associated with Parivartan, a foundation
working for the uplift of child labourers. "It is an initiative
to discourage child labour. There are nearly 100 children studying
in the school. We want the global fashion fraternity to realise
that Indian designers are not a shallow lot and are socially conscious
too," said Sethi.
Ritu
Kumar has turned her attention towards ecology. Her latest collection
"Urban Roots" has made use of natural fabrics and vegetable
colours. "Kishan Garh used to be a forest rich area and now
there are almost no forests left. This moved me tremendously. We
have to maintain the ecological balance. I don't think you can dictate
the mind of others but yes I have adopted vegetable colours and
natural fabrics, which are eco-friendly," said Kumar, president
of the Fashion Design Council of India (FDCI).
Founded
by Muzaffar Ali, Dwar Pe Rozi (Employment at Doorstep) is another
charitable society. Set up in 1990, the society aims to address
social issues in Ali's own village, Kotwara, 100 miles from Patna,
to defend the cause of Art for Peace. The society also runs a school
in a 14-acre mango grove and Dhurie - a weaving workshop sponsored
by UNESCO.
Kotwara
is a shelter for crafts like chikan, zardozi and dhurie with inputs
in design from Meera and Muzaffar Ali. Their team trained at the
National Institute of Design (NID) and the National Institute of
Fashion Technology (NIFT).
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