Weaving brighter future for community
Cooperative in Shaanxi province helps rural women learn a traditional craft to shake off poverty
By Qin Feng in Xi'an and Zhao Ruinan | China Daily | Updated: 2025-01-06 08:51
In December, a dozen skilled women at a cooperative in Weinan, Shaanxi province, were busy handcrafting a batch of baskets.
Each woman worked with dried corn husks and straw, sitting together in a supportive environment.
"They come from surrounding communities, including left-behind women, people with disabilities and those living in poverty, and find local employment opportunities here," said Chen Chunmiao, director of the skilled women's grass-weaving cooperative.
At 56, Chen is an inheritor of Shaanxi province's intangible cultural heritage of grass weaving and one of the first master craftswomen in the local rural area.
Grass weaving is an ancient folk craft that can be traced back to early Chinese history. The ancestors learned to use natural plant fibers such as bulrush, reeds and corn husks to weave practical containers and tools for their daily needs through their close interaction with nature.
"The main materials for our grass weaving are wheat straw and corn husks. It began with weaving straw hats and later evolved to combine practicality with decoration, expanding to nearly a hundred varieties. In 2017, it was recognized as a provincial intangible cultural heritage project," Chen said.
In her early years, Chen was inspired by the abundance of bulrush and corn husks in her hometown. However, she also noticed that traditional grass-weaving skills were fading and at risk of disappearing.
Driven by her love for local culture, she immersed herself in the effort to preserve grass-weaving skills and promote the development of a local industry.
Since 2003, Chen has led initiatives in the grass-weaving industry from the grassroots craft group in Miaodi village, continuously conducting research, innovation and product diversification based on inherited techniques.
"Initially, my family did not support me in pursuing grass weaving. They believed it was not a proper job and would not generate income," Chen said.
Even people in the village doubted her, unconvinced that grass weaving could be profitable. To combat this skepticism, she went door to door to persuade them.
In 2017, Chen established the skilled women's grass-weaving cooperative, a private enterprise that integrates the inheritance, design, training, processing and sales of grass-weaving products.