Braving social taboos,
a number of Kashmiri women have successfully made their presence
felt on the business scene in the state of Jammu and Kashmir. From
establishing food-processing units to cultivating flowers for
foreign markets to setting up a printing press, these women have
given their male counterparts a run for their money.
Though many hold educational degrees unrelated to the nature of
their business, they enjoy an annual turnover of between Rs 5 and Rs
10 million (US $1=Rs 40). Some even cater to an international
clientele.
Take the case of Rifat
Mushtaq, 50, one of the oldest
women entrepreneurs in Kashmir. Rifat ventured into
the business world by establishing a matchbox
manufacturing unit. Currently, she runs a cardboard
box manufacturing unit and a printing press in the
industrial area of Zakura, on the outskirts of
Srinagar. A post-graduate, Rifat says she dabbled in
teaching and even worked at a bank before finally
setting up her businesses in 1984.
"I wanted to be independent and work for myself. I
ventured into the match box business with personal and
borrowed investments to the tune of Rs 1 million. The
business did well and I invested further to set up an
automatic plant," explains Rifat.
Unfortunately, the onset of militancy in the 1990s led
to huge losses for Rifat. The government discontinued
her licence for security reasons (she used gunpowder
as a raw material) and she had to shut down the plant.
"I was not ready to accept defeat. I borrowed money
from friends and started a polythene bag-manufacturing
unit that was quite profitable."
However, the government even had this unit closed,
claiming it was an environmental hazard, she recalls.
The closure meant another setback, this time to the
tune of Rs 2.5 million. Rifat had to sell her
jewellary and other assets to clear the debts.
Then, in 1998, a never-say-die Rifat set up a printing
press that, today, ranks among one of the biggest in
Kashmir. She has also diversified, by manufacturing
and printing cardboard boxes for packaging dry and
fresh fruits. "I have worked hard, walking four to
five kilometres every day to take orders and show
customers what I was doing. I handled all the
technical and marketing aspects of the business."
Married to a scientist and a mother of two sons, aged
22 and 19, Rifat acknowledges her husband's support.
"He continued to extend moral support despite the fact
that I had incurred huge financial losses. Though he
was not involved in the business operations, he gave
me a shoulder to cry on and the encouragement to keep
at it." Her business now registers an impressive
annual return of Rs 5 to 6 million. In fact, she
expects her returns to near the Rs 10 million mark,
this year. Rifat has employed about a dozen local
Kashmiri women for the printing, folding and other
technical jobs, in addition to the skilled male labour
from Punjab. "I feel proud to provide employment to
young local Kashmiri women," says the entrepreneur.
Rubeena Tabasum of Chadoora in Budgam district
represents the small-town success story. Recipient of
the Women Entrepreneur Award, 2007, conferred by J&K
Bank, Rubeena, who is in her early 30s, was inspired
by a radio programme to venture into floriculture.
On land given to her by her in-laws and with financial
assistance from J&K Bank, Rubeena ventured into the
cut flowers trade, cultivating carnations under
controlled temperature and humidity conditions. Soon
she, too, diversified her business. Today, she has
five greenhouses of carnations and lilies and an open
field of gladioli in place. Of course, despite the
success, her venture has not been a bed of roses.
"People in the rural areas don't appreciate working
under a woman. One has to move ahead by pushing them
to the limit." Today, she has over a dozen workers and
an annual turnover between Rs 2-3 million.
Enjoying the sweet fragrance of success is another
famous florist of Srinagar, Nusrat Jahan Ara, 27. A
computer graduate, Nusrat gave up a lucrative
government job five years ago to set up Petals and
Ferns Cooperative Ltd. "When I started out, I would
take flowers on credit, send them to Delhi for sale
and pay the farmers later. Those were days of utter
frustration and hard work," recalls Nusrat. Now,
enjoying the fruits of her labour, Nusrat has forayed
into the housekeeping business. She employs 80 people
and boasts of an annual return of Rs 5 million.
Shahala Sheikh, 32, has also crafted a name for
herself. A commerce graduate from Bangalore and
hailing from an affluent family, Shahala resolved to
revive her late father's furniture business. The
venture required her to revive a saw mill and
furniture unit at Parimpore on the Srinagar-Gulmarg
Road.
Recalls Shahla, "I have had tough times: Wood carvers
were reluctant to come here due to militancy (she now
hires skilled labour from Uttar Pradesh) and it was
initially difficult to make 30 men listen to a young
person like me."
Currently, she is in the process of opening showrooms
in Delhi and Mumbai and also reviving a contract with
a French firm that was signed by her father and which
will see Shahla's firm benefiting from foreign
technical expertise in furniture manufacturing and
from a ready international market.
Ulfat Rasool Khan, 25, has a sharp sense of local
flavour. She set up a Kashmiri cuisine food-processing
unit at Khanmoh Food Park with an investment of Rs 1
million. The commerce graduate explains, "Kashmiri
cuisine involves elaborate cooking. I have
deliberately decided to venture into Kashmiri food
processing. There is a great demand for it."
The list of successful women entrepreneurs in Kashmir
does not end here. According to sociologists, many
women stepped out of their domestic cocoons as a
result of the turmoil and challenges thrown up by
militancy in the Valley. The troubled times were a
test of their willpower and spirits, says Professor
Bashir Ahmad Dabla, Dean, Faculty of Social Sciences,
University of Kashmir.
"Nearly half the students at Kashmir Entrepreneur
Development Institute are enthusiastic women who are
working towards setting up their own businesses or
plan to do so in the near future," says Niala Khanday,
senior faculty, Entrepreneurship Development
Institute, J&K.
The government, too, has done its bit to encourage
women entrepreneurs. According to Muzafar Hussain,
General Manager, Jammu and Kashmir Industries
Department, while there are no special incentives,
women are always given preference.
Records of the last three years show that at least 66
women in Srinagar District are operating registered
and functional small-scale industrial units; while 56
others are in the provincial stages of registration.
While there are no figures for the rest of the state,
the number of women entrepreneurs could be gauged from
the quantum of loans taken. In the past three years,
women entrepreneurs have taken financial assistance
between Rs 300-350 million from different banking
institutions.
August 12,
2007
By arrangement with
WFS
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