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Hair goes there

Here’s one export business in which India is the world leader, reports Paramita Ghosh.

Updated on: Jul 12, 2009 12:51 AM IST
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We are number one in something at last, even if it’s the export of raw human hair,” says 58-year-old Bhagwan Sahai Solanki of Karol Bagh, Delhi, with a laugh. “India now tops unprocessed hair exports. Our products put together have conquered the Americas, Africa and Europe. Their models walk the ramp wearing Chinese wigs made with Indian hair.”

HT Image
HT Image

The export houses dealing in human hair are mainly in Delhi and Chennai, but the suppliers are all over. “I get hair from every district of India,” claims Solanki. “Hawkers, barbers, suppliers, wigmakers, exporters — our bread depends on this,” he adds while caressing a switch of hair in his godown as if it were a piece of silk.

The recession has, however, hit the industry in India which employs nearly 25 lakh people. G.R. Kaushik, managing director at the Noida-based Marchers International, for instance, has stopped exporting and has diversified into making non-surgical hair replacements. That’s because the prices have fallen — a kilogram of human hair now fetches Rs 300, half the amount it would have fetched two years ago.

Every hair exporter has his eye on the Tirupati stock. Some 100,000 pounds of hair are collected here every month from the nearly 25,000 people who donate hair every day, says Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam PRO Ram Reddy. Three newspapers print notices of its hair auction in four languages each. So do the temple’s two websites.

A few temples in Tamil Nadu do brisk business too. Tiruttani, the abode of Lord Muruga northwest of Chennai, collected Rs 1.16 crore by auctioning the licence to collect hair offered at the temple in the coming revenue, says P. Dhanapal, the temple’s joint commissioner. This works out to a twelfth of the temple’s annual revenue. “This amount is Rs 60,000 more than last year.” The Muruga temple at Palani nearby is also raking it in. P. Rajamanickkam, a senior official at the temple, says the governing trust hopes to raise Rs 2 crore this year through hair.

As elsewhere, devotion pays various dividends here too.

(Inputs from M.R. Venkatesh)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paramita Ghosh

Paramita Ghosh has been working as a journalist for over 20 years and writes socio-political and culture features. She works in the Weekend section as a senior assistant editor and has reported from Vienna, Jaffna and Singapore.

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