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Carmel Herzeliyya Newsreel 365, 1962

Ora Weaving Factory for Blind Womens 5th Anniversary

1962
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Directed by: Unknown
Subtitles: English, Hebrew
The Ora embroidery factory was a joint WLI (Women’s League for Israel) and Ministry of Labour and Welfare project. Officially christened in 1957 in Netanya’s Fourth Pioneer Women’s Home, the factory set out to rehabilitate blind women through productive labour, and to allow them to lead a full, independent life despite their condition. A sewing mill was set up next to the factory where immigrants and a variety of disabled women were employed, making women and childrenswear, prayer shawls, maps, and a range of other textile products – all made with the factory’s colourful fabrics, at top quality, and boasting an original Israeli style and aesthetic. The name ‘Ora’ [from the Hebrew word ‘Or’, for light] imprinted on childrenswear labels, symbolised the light being restored in the lives of these young blind women, by helping them to become fully self-sufficient workers. In 1959, the factory’s all-female staff were awarded the Kaplan Labour Prize. Not a single brow was raised over the award going to the women. If anything, the only thing to be left bewildered by was the women’s awe-inspiring ability (who had been blind from childhood!) to master a trade requiring such fine craftsmanship. It was through touch that they were able to get a feel for the embroidery patterns. And whilst the factory was a Department of Welfare initiative, by no means was Ora a non-profit establishment, nor were its products marketed from a place of sentimental philanthropy. “Might it be that the vast range of products, [and] the original style evident in Ora garments are not the work of an artist named Ora but rather, the handicraft of many young women who have never set eyes on their own handiwork, or anything else for that matter?” An Al HaMishmar [‘on guard’ – a long defunct daily paper] reporter mused in 1960. In 1961, the brand was named an Excellent Presenter at a variety of international fairs and exhibitions in the United States, Australia, and Germany. Later, at one of the regular star-studded fashion shows at the WLI House, guests were all left in awe – not only of the original, fashion-forward designs, but also of the young blind models walking the runway. The same women who had made and manufactured these designs were now showcasing them on their person. At its five-year anniversary mark, the embroidery factory had 16 young blind women on payroll, and six additional female employees with special needs who, together, produced 22,000sqm’s (237,000sqft.) worth of fabric, valued at £210,000 [Israeli pounds – the currency that predated the shekel]. At the press conference held at Netanya’s Greenspan Hotel, then Welfare Secretary, Shlomo Yosef Burg, announced a new blind women’s training centre for textile craftwork at Ramat Gan’s Ort School. The programme, amongst other things, also included a threading module, with each class comprising ten young blind women.

Minister of Social Affairs Yosef Burg visits the Ora weaving factory in Netanya on its 5th anniversary. Blind women weave with looms in the workshop. Finally, children wear clothes produced by Ora.

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