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The Hindu
The Hindu
Lifestyle
Laila Tyabji

Air India’s update won’t kill the sari

“No more saris? Air India may bring in new look for flight crew” was the headline. The article continued, “For six decades now, Air India’s flight attendants have worn the whole nine yards while negotiating long-haul flights and demanding passengers... The new look, expected to be unveiled in November, will include churidars for women and suits for men”. As someone known to be a sari aficionado, my phone began to ring. Everyone wanted my views.

My initial reaction was sadness. Since I wear saris even when riding a camel or climbing onto the upper berth in a train, I can vouch for their comfort and ease in all situations (except possibly a typhoon or snow storm!). To give “negotiating long-haul flights and demanding customers” as a reason to abandon the sari is nonsense. Women all over India cycle, work on building sites, run businesses, and deliver babies wearing saris. And the women scientists who worked tirelessly to make our successful mission to the moon happen, all wore saris. Saris epitomise a timeless feminine aesthetic and are exquisitely becoming, making all shapes and sizes look beautiful.

Wonderfully sleek

However, change and innovation are inevitable. Every era and new management wants to impose its own stamp. Nor is all change a bad thing; it often brings with it freshness and vitality. Giving up the traditional sari drape may be an opportunity for creativity and our known jugaad. India has many costumes that permit easy movement, while the sari itself has over a 100 draping styles, including knee-length, calf-length and divided skirt versions, as well as more contemporary stitched variations.

An all-women Air India crew to celebrate International Women’s Day (Source: A. Muralitharan)

I remember a wonderfully sleek Tarun Tahiliani sari dress that could hold its own on any 21st century fashion ramp, let alone the aisle of an airline. Air India itself once had an elegant printed silk tunic and an Aligarh pyjama ensemble with a long scarf attached to one shoulder. There are hundreds of exciting options. Just as long as they don’t put Air India cabin staff into the tight jackets, mini skirts, neck scarves, little caps, and stockings that make flight attendants of most of our Indian airlines look so dowdy, imitative, and dated.

I gather that designer Manish Malhotra has been entrusted with the task. He is certainly both versatile and experienced, having designed not just the Swarovski and zardozi-encrusted lehengas, ghagras and sherwanis that feature at every Bollywood and socialite wedding, but also costumes for literally hundreds of films in every genre from gangster to sci-fi. His repertoire includes jewellery, home decor, and beauty products. Wikipedia describes Malhotra’s style as “timeless, relevant and inspirational for every generation” and what could be a better brief for this particular challenge.

Air India crew pose with trays of food. (Source: A. Roy Chowdhury)

Buying on the rise

Nor do I think Air India changing its uniforms spells the end of the sari! Ever since I can remember, people have been predicting its demise. Luckily, it hasn’t happened yet. A sari is simply too becoming to abandon altogether. In fact, our Dastkar weaver groups say sari buying is actually on the rise. It’s true that the young wear them less, and so do urban office-goers. But almost all still wear saris as well. I don’t think it’s so much an issue of actually draping and wearing it, as the bother of laundering and ironing. Both the old-fashioned dhobis and spaces to hang and dry a sari are in short supply in our high-rise metro cities. I wish some brilliant IIT graduate would invent a machine that could starch, dry and roller-press saris. It would be a sell-out. Otherwise, working-class sari wearers will end up only wearing synthetics, and others will reserve theirs for formal and festive wear, losing many wonderful handloom cotton traditions in the process.

And, back to newspaper reports, why do reporters always refer to the sari as the ‘whole nine yards’? The sari is six yards or five-and-a-half metres, unless it’s the almost extinct Maharashtrian or Tamil Brahmin style. To call it “the nine yard drape” is as silly and inaccurate as calling the proposed churidars a change to “more contemporary attire”. In fact the Nivi sari style current today originated in Kolkata in the late 19th century, while churidars are from Mughal times.

I think it is important that Air India does have uniforms that are distinctive, and uniquely Indian: it’s what distinguishes us from the myriad other airlines that criss-cross the international skies. Even when Air India had lost its earlier reputation in almost every department (along with its trademark Maharaja), people raved about (and remembered) its welcoming air crew in their ravishing costumes. Putting them in western wear would be like substituting our namaste greeting with a gum-chewing hi!

The writer is chairperson-founder member of Dastkar, Society for Crafts & Craftspeople

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