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About Ina
My name is Ina le Roux and I live in Johannesburg. I
devote myself fulltime to the Tambani project. I travel about four times a
year to America and I also go to Germany where two dear friends have taken
it upon themselves to market Tambani products in Munchen. Inbetween shows
I go to Venda to see the women and encourage them. They are the heart
of this embroidering project and need my attention and support. In Johannesburg
my Malawian houseman, Harold Sibande, helps me to silkscreen images
onto cloth ready to be embroidered. The women who do the embroidery live about 6
– 7 hours from Johannesburg. I have two supervisors who hand out embroidery yarn
and who check quality.
Once a month one of the embroiders comes from Venda with an
enormous bag full of embroideries. She leaves Venda very early in the morning
and travels on a small bus to Sibasa. There she boards a big bus for the trip to
Johannesburg. Late that afternoon she arrives at Johannesburg station where I
pick her up. The first words are always, 'This place is very far'. As soon as
she gets to my house she asks for water. The bus driver stops only once on the
long journey and everybody has to rush for the bathroom and if you're not quick
enough the bus driver hoots impatiently so it's prudent to drink nothing before
or during the trip.
Then the two of us sit for 2 nights to fill pay packets and to
write a short letter – the women are very disappointed if there is no letter
with the money. Once every 2 or 3 months I pay them a visit and we have a
glorious time of folk tale performances around open fires and ironing out
problems with reading glasses or embroidery colours or just enjoying children
climbing onto our laps. Friends from Johannesburg love to go with me and help
with the driving. The hospitality of these extremely poor people is an
unbelievable experience. Times like this make city life seem very far away.
I do not get paid by Tambani, as a matter of fact – I often
support the project out of my own pocket. The reason for this is that my work
force constantly outstrips my market demands. I find it impossible to say “no”
if someone asks to “join the cloth team”. Such a request usually comes from a
mother at her wits end, school fees have to be paid or there is literally no
food.
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