Skip to main content
International Partnerships

Sharing handicraft skills and promoting Uzbek women’s employment

A training motivated Sadokat to expand her business

We are always developing new designs and colours which our customers like. Everyone who makes them brings their own ideas, which I really like.

Sadokat Mirzaeva

Teaching young women

Over 100 young women come to the Hunarmand Markazi crafts centre to learn to make dolls and other crafts, such as patchwork, embroidery and design-sewing. They participate in a government-sponsored apprenticeship programme. Sadokat also goes and teaches women in their homes in the Uzbekistan enclaves on the Kyrgyz territory. She shows them the crafting techniques and provides the materials. The products can then be sold via the Hunarmand Markazi centre.

Future plans

Sadokat has several plans to develop her crafts centre. As some women have to bring their small children with them when they come to work, her priority is to build a small kindergarten in the centre. In addition, she would like to develop the crafts lessons she gives children outside school hours. The children who come to the centre are very interested in crafts and they enjoy working together.

Another plan is to construct a guest house in the Hunarmand Markazi centre. That way visitors could easily stay at the centre and earn income from their work. She would also like to acquire some looms to lead carpet-making and ikat-weaving workshops.

About the project

Sadokat took part in training workshop at the Margilan Crafts Development Centre in 2019 to enhance her skills and learn about entrepreneurship. The workshop was part of the Silk Road Heritage Corridors programme activities, implemented by UNESCO and funded by the European Union.