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This Diwali, Let’s Remember How Muslim Potters of Gujarat Have Kept Hindu Traditions Going

Despite insufficient income, lean periods during monsoons and unexpected hardship such as the floods this year, the Sumra Muslim potters return every year to Sarkhej Roza, where the pots they make are bought by Hindu wholesale traders, evoking secular unity. Gajanan Khergamker takes a closer look.

This Diwali, Let’s Remember How Muslim Potters of Gujarat Have Kept Hindu Traditions Going

Every morning, Rehman Sumra of Kheralu village rummages through his wares, salvaging whatever he can, packing them for his annual journey to work.

Each passing day brings increased anxiety to the muslim potter who, like his fellow potters, was hit the worst by the most recent floods in Gujarat. With the rains having stopped, it’s time to go to Ahmedabad and start work” he says, looking at the cloudy skies.

In September, more than hundred potters belonging to the Sumra community head for Ahmedabad’s Sarkhej Roza from their villages in Mehsana.

In Sarkhej Roza, they set up makaan and karkhana, home and workshop, at spaces they take on a five-year lease.

Potter Rehman Sumra (second from left) in Sarkhej Roza with his family. (Photo by Gajanan Khergamker)
Potter Rehman Sumra (second from left) in Sarkhej Roza with his family. (Photo by Gajanan Khergamker)

Running out of money as their work had been delayed, Rehman incurred unexpected additional expenditures in repairing his flood-hit village home.

While the government forces rescued stranded citizens from Banaskantha, Patan and Mehsana districts in north Gujarat, the badly affected potter community waited out the monsoons.

“We are through with our savings, there’s no work in the village, and to top it, we suffered financial loss owing to the rains,” Mariam, Rehman’s wife, told VillageSquare.in. Having lived off their earnings during the heavy monsoon, the sumras are keen to get back to work.

Molding secular ties

In spite of the hardships and hand-to-mouth existence, the sumras look forward to their work.

The economic activity has carved out a beautiful socio-cultural association as the muslim sumra families make pots for the predominantly hindu kumbhars in Gujarat, Rajasthan and Maharashtra, molding secular ties, especially in troubled times.

With the rain clouds receding and humidity decreasing, Rehman and his wife Mariam are set to return to Sarkhej Roza to start their work once again. For the next eight months, the Sarkhej Roza suburb of Ahmedabad will be home to Rehman and hundreds of other muslim potters.

From the imminent Diwali until the next chaumasa, as they call the monsoons, they will make thousands of pots that will be bought by wholesalers and retailers alike.

The sumras specialise in making pots of different shapes and sizes for storing water and keeping it cool during summers.

Each kumbharwada, as a settlement of potters is known, has approximately 20 potter families residing and working together. The potter families in a kumbharwada are mostly from the same village. The shanties are lined next to each other and covered with huge plastic sheets.

Pots are placed in beautiful symmetrical patterns, in rows and stacked vertically, to be sold in the wholesale market.

The families in a kumbharwada have just one landlord who owns the entire plot and rents out each shanty for Rs 1,200 per month. With an additional expenditure on electricity, the charges add up to Rs 2,000 per month and the potters do not pay any deposit. They make five-year agreements and work entirely on trust.

The potter families who come to Sarkhej Roza have been doing so regularly for the last 15 years. Some like Noori have been coming for 20 years. “I live here and go to my village only when I have to attend a family function,” the 50-year-old from Sidhpur in Patan district tells VillageSquare.in. For many, the temporary homes seem more permanent to them than the houses in their native villages.

Making pots, not money

Pots on display for sale at Sarkhej Roza. (Photo by Gajanan Khergamker)
Pots on display for sale at Sarkhej Roza. (Photo by Gajanan Khergamker)

The process of making pottery isn’t exactly an easy one.

A sumra tells VillageSquare.in that getting the clay or chikni mitti, the raw material, is tough. Clay is sourced from the beds of lakes of Sanand. A tractor load of clay for making about 500 pots costs Rs 2,000. Once the pots are made, they need to be coloured with geru (earthen color), which is ordered from Thaan, a village about 120 km from Sarkhej Roza.

Rehman’s brother-in-law, 20-year-old Imran Haji Sumra, lives in an adjacent shanty with his family and transports the pots to cities such as Surat and Valsad in South Gujarat. Within a few years of starting work, he has been able to buy a mini truck that can transport 700 pots. For instance, to deliver pots in Surat, 350 km from Ahmedabad, Imran earns Rs 7,000.

Earnings during the season are regular.

Making ends meet until there is enough demand for pots is tricky for the potters. Sometimes the pots don’t sell as well as expected. Then the sumras leave the pots in their karkhanas and return to their village; the next year they sell the same during Diwali.

Family effort

Noori (second from right) with her daughter and parents-in-law. (Photo by Gajanan Khergamker)

Contrary to the stereotypes associated with the community, men and women work shoulder to shoulder.

While Rehman undertakes arduous physical tasks, Mariam handles equally backbreaking ones. Lifting heavy pots and bags of clay, creating artistic pots are gender-neutral activities for the community.

Shahida, one of Noori’s daughters, comes to Sarkhej Roza every year to help her mother in the family business and then returns to her marital family in Mandali village in Mehsana district.

“I help my mother in colouring and baking the pots,” Shahida informs VillageSquare.in while cooking for the family.

Noori’s parents-in-law Ibrahim Sumra and Ruksana rest on the makeshift bed as Noori ducks below the low ceiling fan to sit next to them. “It is important to keep the fan low so the pots can dry quickly,” she explains.

Besides helping the men make pots, all the members of the potter family pitch in to make a collective earning.

Secular network

While the potters comprise are predominantly only muslims, they deal primarily with hindu wholesale dealers who truck away pots in bulk. Ahmedabad’s Vejalpur-based Girish Prajapati, a regular wholesale dealer says he feels at home when he comes to Sarkhej Roza to buy pots. “I am a Prajapati, a hindu potter and I always buy my wares from the sumras. We have been doing business for many years now, without a single problem,” he tells VillageSquare.in.

Gajanan Khergamker is a Mumbai-based independent editor, solicitor and filmmaker. He heads www.DraftCraft.in, an India-based media-legal think tank. 

Adapted from an article originally published on VillageSquare.in. Subscribe to VillageSquare’s weekly update on the website for more stories from rural India.

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