Q: How did working with young Turkish women prepare you to help those in the new Syrian refugee camps begin to pick up the pieces in their lives?
A: Three years ago I started working with my contacts in the Turkish local government to help teach Syrian women. I explained how teaching a vocation, as with the Turks, would empower them beyond making money; it would be giving them a career and power over their lives. They were eager to cooperate.
In 2012, Woven Legends began training refugees in the Adiyaman camp how to weave carpets. Three years later, we now have six workshop tents there, consisting of 69 looms and 216 active weavers. Woven Legends started a second weaving project in 2015 in the Harran, Urfa refugee camp with 13 looms and 25 weavers, and hopes to do even more in the future.
In a world where the headlines are dominated every day by stories about the refugee crisis, this operation has been an undeniable success, one lauded by the Turkish government crisis organization - AFAD - in charge of the camps, as a model of how to provide refugees lasting and long-term support.
Syrian and Turkish weavers are paid the same wage. Our motto is "everyone gets paid the same." We have 80+ looms for the refugees to work on. The Syrian weavers learned to weave our Heriz, Rubia, Folk and Fish, Khotan and Uskudar collections. And the women in the second camp weave for our Shirvan collection. I am proud to say that we trust their skill for high profile projects such as museums when it comes to these weaves.