Margaret Martin made these two gorgeous quilts, which arrived today. Thank you very much, Margaret - they will be greatly appreciated, and hopefully you will see a photo of them wrapped around a little person in due course, when Yaso has delivered the next lot of quilts and taken more photos :-)
Please read the introduction to learn more about the Patea Quilt collective.
15 October 2014
11 October 2014
Update on PNG project from Yaso, October 2014
I have received an email and some new photos from Yaso, which I am posting here to bring all our quilt donors up to date on what she has been doing.
Hi Gina,
It was exhausting and I was also
down with a bad cough and fever - so it was quite a bit of effort to hold
up. But the project is growing well - and it is so rewarding to see the
difference.
I managed to go up to the
last village, Yakepa which is about 37 kms from the previous village
and it took us about 18 hours to get there - getting stuck in
mud and trying to build little bridges across
broken roads etc. But people were so excited when we got there. I
travel on my own with the project team from there itself.
They had kept the quilts with them.
They had carried it up previously when
we brought it up to the second last village. I distributed
them and have some photos and also took a small video clip. A very
sad story in the midst of all this joy was that one of the small babies (6
months) who was on the list to receive a quilt died that night ( I am not
sure, but I think it might have been pneumonia) . It was so tragic
that next morning her father was there and
he told me. I handed him a quilt (one of the smaller fleece
blankets you had made as extras) so he could wrap the
child and place her in the grave. They can't afford coffins.
Thanks for collecting all those quilt. I am still trying to work out how best
to transport them. One of the feedback from this project is
that we are working with the tribal community as partners - not as charity or
aid recipients So we have been thinking of some ideas in which we
can work with your Quilt Collective - so that it becomes an enterprise. There
were a couple of suggestions of (a) making them
and also teaching them (via handouts and video) so that
they can sell and develop skills and a livelihood (b) create a
partnership so they can share the making and we think of selling
these quilts internationally with special logos etc.
I am meeting with a couple of my
Masters students next week to discuss further - and we might all meet
together and talk more. That way, there is also a couple of students who can be
more regular than me.
I am happy to speak at the Probus
Club. I am in Melbourne for a little while - (Sydney trip - 10th to 14th Nov),
and another trip on 10th Dec. But otherwise, we can try
and schedule something in. I can also show the 35 minute new
video I have made of my work there. Just doing last minute edits on
it.
I am attaching a couple of
photos. Will download the video and bring that up to you soon. I will attach
the photos in separate emails.
love and thanks for all
your dedication and work
Yaso
Dr.
Yaso Nadarajah
Senior
Research Fellow ( Globalism Research Center) &
Lecturer
School
of Global, Urban and Social Studies
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