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NEWS & LETTERS, May 2002 

Women's co-ops in Chiapas

(A young woman from Chiapas, Manuela Diaz, spoke to News & Letters recently about the cooperative she had helped organize there, the Jolom Mayetik Weavers' Cooperative. We have translated her remarks from Spanish.)

I'm from Chiapas, here as the president of my cooperative to tell others about what we are doing. We organized our cooperative because the women have many needs and problems. We have no money or food or medicine for our families. The only large town nearby is San Cristobal, where we had to sell everything  we made for cheap prices. We created the cooperative so we could look for markets besides San Cristobal.

It is important to understand the difference between co-ops run by the government and what we are doing. We demanded that we be in control of our own money and have social and political participation, so we formed our own independent co-ops.

After the 1994 uprising  in Chiapas, women began to participate more directly in political matters, specifically meetings and roadblocks. That was a significant change from before, when women primarily stayed at home. The governmental co-ops were run by men who made all the decisions, while the women did all the work. Now women have taken responsibility for decision making and the direction that things are going.

We make cotton and woolen woven bags, also wall hangings, napkins, decorative covers, pillow cases, change purses, bracelets, dolls, stuffed animals and even Zapatista dolls. We use back strap looms and weave colored threads into the actual fabric, which looks like embroidery.

It takes a lot of work to do the weaving, but we also need to care for our homes and families. Sometimes I might wake up at 2:00 a.m. in order to get my weaving done, but then I have all the other chores I must do and so I get to bed by 11:00 at night. That's the way it is for a lot of women, especially when you have young children to take care of. It's difficult because there are so many needs.

Often we have no housing, or there is no corn, or there are families that have no fields to work. For the families, even if there is a fair trade, they don't get the minimum salary for their weavings. They take classes in accounting and calculate the price, for example, of one pillow case and if they'd get the minimum it would be 300 pesos per pillow case. They sell it at 135 and 50% stays in the community to pay rent for the store, electricity, transportation costs for the women to bring in the products and administrative costs for the coop representatives.

In the U.S. they can make a little bit more but it's still not a fair price. Even though economically it's not a viable system, the co-ops are important because the women get the ability to get out of their homes, to come together and talk.

Women have developed a training center to help develop skills they never had before. There is a pedal loom there that allows you to work broader fabrics and we also have a sewing machine that women can learn about. Women also learn how to spread information to other areas concerning our cooperative. We're building a new training center which is not in San Cristobal but closer to the communities where we live. At the new center there will be young women who haven't been involved before so that is very exciting to us.

We have some girls that are involved who are 9-10 years old, and we have a broad span of ages, going up past 50 years old. Some of the younger women speak Spanish so they can go to various fairs and sell the goods. Some young women don't want to marry. They want to continue with their education and/or move to the city. They often get these skills through the co-op as well. In this way they are challenging racism against the rural Indian women within the broader Spanish speaking culture.

Before 1994 women didn't participate in much, but after, many more things were opened up for us. What the Zapatista women said was "we have a right to participate in this." Some things have changed, but some  have not. Things have gotten a little better regarding domestic violence, but there are still some men who rape and beat women. In some cases when women leave the house, if they don't come back on time, they'll get beaten. Or, in other cases, men won't give women enough money to get things they need for the household, especially if it's for the children. Or, if women are sick, they won't take them to the clinic or for medicine.

When I return, I want to tell the other women, in addition to ideas, what life is like here. There are many women who just don't know what life is like anywhere else.

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