Blog Action Day – Poverty (Tsunamika Dolls)

My friend at work that volunteered in India this past summer and the summer before brought me back a precious little gift. A Tsunamika doll. A symbol of living hope.

“This project is conceived and executed by Upasana Design Studio of Auroville in the seaside villages of Auroville’s bioregion. Nearly 480 fisherwomen from 6 villages are trained and from them around 180 ladies are now creating these little dolls called Tsunamika. She has been hand-made from fabrics left over from other creative works in Upasana. The project team, who trained the ladies, now supplies them with raw materials to continue producing the dolls. All dolls produced are bought from them in bulk and are gifted unconditionally worldwide by Upasana.”

What strikes me here is that these women are being empowered to make life a little better for themselves. Many, if not all, were left with very little after the Tsunami. These ladies now have a job they can do daily. “When they earn money through work, there is dignity, pride and self respect in them, they know the value of what they receive, they learn new skills, they learn to discipline and channelize their energies. These are the real but intangible assets they receive, money is only a means to brings this out.”

Ending poverty is not purely giving out money to those in need. It is helping those that need it to find that dignity, pride, and self respect that we each strive for regardless of our situation. It is a fundamental need we each have.
I proudly wear my Tsunamaki doll each day, pinned to my name badge at work. It reminds me of many things of which I am thankful and grateful.

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