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ETHICAL/GREEN POLICY

There are lot of people who believe that ethics and business don’t mix.
We are more than pleased to say, that most of our customers would appose this idea and we try hard to ensure our suppliers are like minded..

There are several areas of concern (which we get asked about regularly) being:

1. Testing on animals.
2. Child labour in developing nations.
3. Fair Trade

4. Green Issues

Testing on animals
None of the products that Baraka stocks has been tested on animals.
However, it is virtually impossible for any company to claim that all the basic ingredients that go in to a product have never* been tested on animals. It is simply impossible to make such a claim.

What we can state however is that as far as possible we use natural, pure ingredients, we use only reputable suppliers who hold similar principles to ourselves, and who endeavour to produce entirely cruelty free product.
* It is probably accurate that no basic ingredient has been tested on animals since 1967.


Child labour

We always do our best to ascertain whether a company is likely to be using child labour as cheap or slave labour and steer well clear. Of course these days no exporting company from India or the far east is likely to admit it, so a degree of common sense and a nose for such things is important. 

Exported products usually command a higher price than the local market so there really is no commercial pressure on manufacturers to cut costs to such a degree at the risk of loosing a lucrative export order.  The deliberate systematic use of child labour is unnecessary.  However - and this is a tricky however, the reality is that culturally in small family businesses children are a part of the business.

In India for example a lot of components of craft work are produced by out-workers in the villages.  There are over a million villages in India relying on farming and craft work as a means of income.   A village will hand down particular craft skills from generation to generation and rely on this for extra income.
Most villages still don’t have electricity or running water, but most children will attend a morning school.
In the afternoons children will help in what is essentially the family business.

The truth is that the villages of India are a massive collective cottage industry. It is superbly organised with agents representing villages or groups and ferrying materials in and finished goods back. Each area of the country has it’s own special skills handed down the generations. What do they make? That ethnic skirt you are wearing, the shirt, jute bag, those wooden toys, and the beads in your fashion jewellery - all made in the villages of India. Factories exist of course, but often the overspill work finds it’s way to the villages.

This is a report from one of our main UK wholesalers Ancient Wisdom
I worried that exploitation might be endemic in this cottage industry culture so I was determined to go and see for myself. 

We decided that we wanted to visit a village and in February 2006 on a trip to Calcutta managed to persuade one of our suppliers to accompany us on a trip to visit an out lying village. 

We stopped the car at a small shack like shop and the second as we alighted from our 4x4 dozens of small children came running, but surprisingly they didn’t beg or tug at us (like in the city) they just came to smile and stare unabashed at the rare white faces we stared back and smiled. My man in Calcutta (to whom this was also an adventure) asked the guy in the shack if it would be OK to visit the village, a huge brilliant white smile provided the affirmative answer. So we trouped off down a neat well-maintained brick path like pied pipers of Hamlin with a crowd of kids laughing and skipping behind us. Shortly we came to the village; on each side of the path at intervals lay inward looking compounds made up of mud-brick buildings around an inner courtyard where the families worked ate and in the heat of summer slept. We asked if it was OK to enter one - of course it was - and all the kids crushed in after us. Immediately we found the fabled cottage industry in full swing, this village specialised in creating lavish sequinned saris as worn by the socialite urban ladies. There stretched between bamboo poles was the current creation – a real family business with every generation involved, including dare I say children. They tell me that many craft skills are jealously guarded and passed unwritten down the generations.

But this was not a rat infested slum buzzing with mosquitoes, it was devoid of any modern amenity including electricity but everywhere was neat and tidy. The atmosphere was industrious with everyone smiling. We discovered that the children attended a morning school a mile or so back up the road but what struck me most was that absolutely everyone had Hollywood smiles – perfect sets of gleaming white teeth.
This is only one village in a million, although we did see other fishing villages in the Sunder bans similar but it’s certainly not the third world poverty I half expected. If anything the life style we glimpsed here seems to be a peaceful kind of utopia. The one thing that everyone tells you about village people is that they are good people, they are honest people and they are hard working people.
David Ancient Wisdom

 

Fair Trade
We support other small local businesses/designers/craft and trades people wherever possible.
We pay fair wages to our staff in the UK and profit share with staff at Outdoor Festivals
We source our goods from like minded ethical suppliers either directly from India or from wholesalers in the UK & Europe
 
Goods sourced directly from India

We travel twice a year to India and Nepal seeking out new product lines and trying to fulfil our customer’s wish lists.

We visit suppliers most of which are small family run businesses, not only to do deals but also to see for ourselves how well staff and subcontractors are treated.  
How it works in India, is that goods for export are priced higher than goods for domestic sale (in India). This means that exporting companies should be able to provide better conditions and pay for their staff (and a supply a better quality product for their foreign customers).

We are happy to work within this system provided that we can see the benefits. Paying a higher price for a superior quality product, so that everyone is happy,  Indian workers, the traders in between and you our valued customers. This is our version of Fair Trade.

Be aware that some importers will work outside this system buying as if for the domestic market but exporting sometimes inferior goods , in order to boost profits or compete unfairly with other importers.

Good Examples

What we love at Baraka about buying goods directly from countries such as India, is that we can see first hand where our money is doing and how it is supporting family’s and community’s to grow.

For example our coat/fleece jacket supplier and his whole family has moved to India from Kashmir, to access  better healthcare for his youngest daughter who has severe asthma . By buying from Baraka  you are supporting his family directly to create a better life for themselves in Rajasthan.

Another larger and more established garment wholesaler, buys up land around Pushkar so that it can’t be developed, thus enabling the local people to stay living on the land using traditional farming methods. All he asks in return that they supply a manageable amount of vegetables each week to feed his factory and wholesale workers in the town.

Green Issues
Small businesses are not obliged to recycle, but we have chosen to pay the local council to recycle every bit of waste we can. We have a strict recycling in the shop and at festivals. We use second hand furniture and  recycled materials for our shop displays, wherever possible, repair and reuse wherever we can.
We recycle all our cardboard and paper packaging. We re-use bubble wrap and envelopes several times.

We produce our own range of recycled clothes, which are made from garments bought at local jumble sales, car boot sales and charity shops. We can make these ‘One Off’s’ designs in customers own recycled knitwear. We also sell lots of recycled clothes from India, including several designs made from recycled saris.

Julie Ann has a 1.1 litre car for low carbon school /work runs and for buying stock locally.

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Baraka
These are the charities we support: TIBA, Tibetan Culture Trust & The Greenlight Foundation

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