
After enjoying a rather long internship at hessnatur in Marketing and Sales last year, I’ve come back from school to Butzbach again for the semester break, and I’m loving it! Back then, it was my responsibility, among other things, to steward the hessnatur Ambassadors to Peru; now my task is to diligently support the PR and Social Media department. But what I’d really like to share with you is my experiences just after my first internship at hessnatur …
I started studying management in the textile industry at LDT Nagold – a specialized academy for textiles and shoes, and within the academy, I was given the opportunity to study as an exchange student at the Pearl Academy of Fashion (PAF) in New Delhi, India. In the spring, I was able to spend four weeks together with around 60 students, traveling through India, full of excitement and anticipation in a distant country and a new culture. Let me share some of my impressions with you.
The Culture
I had already had my own impressions of India through the occasional film or documentary, of course. If you see something for yourself, though, that’s completely different. India is another world, with a completely different and very interesting culture.
Religion, for instance, plays a much larger role in life than in Germany, and women have a different status in society. The caste-system is also a phenomenon which followed me throughout my everyday experience in India. I was constantly confronted with these cultural differences. I also had to get used to Indian cuisine – I often had to fall back on the cookies and Cola I brought with me because I was too wary of the local spices and food vendors, at least in the beginning. But after awhile, even sheepish me discovered Naan bread and spicy Masalas, which could be found on every street corner in a myriad of varieties.
The masses of people which flowed through the streets, both day and night, was another cultural difference. I have never in my life seen so many people in one place as I have crowding the subway stations there, or just plain everywhere in Old Delhi. And then there’s the fact that, as a Caucasian blond woman, I found myself constantly under the accompaniment of my own private crowd – another thing which took getting used to.
And the transportation! The contrast between New Delhi’s very clean, modern subway and the rickshaws rattling along above it was striking. First lesson in using a rickshaw: get the driver to understand where you actually want to go. My fellow students and I found often ourselves dropped off in the middle of nowhere, not at all knowing where we were, let alone how we were going to get back on track to our original destination! The Indian traffic rules, which really don’t exist anyway, also presented a new learning curve. For instance, I had to learn that collisions between rickshaws and fully loaded buses are a daily occurrence. And we’re not talking about theoretical learning here – I’m talking about hands-on experience!
The school
Lessons at PAF were in English (with charming Indian accents), and they were quite interesting. When school was in session, we were taught mainly about the Indian culture and the textile production which took place within the country. While much of the information wasn’t necessarily new, it was a great chance to build up a more solid vocabulary in English textile terminology.
Field trips also augmented the lesson plan. Some of them were simple getaways to Indian shopping centers, which differed little from ours in the West, or to street markets in Old Delhi, or to Dilli Haat – a six acre sized (!) Indian crafts and food bazaar. But we also visited factories and production workshops in the immediate area of New Delhi. And a shopping area outfitted exclusively with luxury goods also provided us with a strange contrast to the everyday India which we had experienced thus far. Even in Germany, where we are no strangers to luxury goods, there is no market place with that kind of prestige.
We found the complete opposite to the Indian shopping centers at the street markets and, especially, in Old Delhi in general, with merchants haggling and wrangling, often trying to palm off overpriced merchandise (overpriced at least for India). And the range and richness of cloth and colors was breathtaking! I found it fascinating to see where buyers on the international textile market procured the accessories, elements, and fabrics which could become someone’s fashion collection tomorrow. But I’m getting a bit ahead of myself, because I’d like to share some more about the textile production facilities we visited. But that will have to come in my next article …