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Someone asked a businessman, “What do you do?”
He smiled, “Whatever it takes.”
In a jeaneus masterstroke, Baba Ramdev is all set to launch his clothing brand, Patanjali Paridhan. If ‘swadeshi sim card’ was not enough, Patanjali is about to flood the markets with their ‘sanskari jeans’. And here comes the rub. Patanjali’s Acharya Balkrishan says, “Swadeshi jeans will be designed according to our customs.” Business, my friend, is incidental - the aim is to redeem our culture, preserve its sanctity with indigenousness duly certified.
I kid thee not, but I have been scratching my head ever since. Weren’t denim jeans all about expressing rebellion – a symbol of defiance? I’m not sure how the cultural denims will hug our pert derrieres in a sanskari way. I’m not sure if they will smell of chandan to drive away any risqué thoughts. Perhaps the cultural version will come with a drawstring instead of zippers which are a reminder of our zipped up colonial past. I’m not sure if their brand ambassador will be Alok Nath or Shilpa Shetty.
Even better, this Paridhan will purge prurient thoughts that knock your head when you watch Italian football players. Above all, the sanskari denims will not be responsible for the age old legend of girls luring boys to their downfall. Yes sir, that good.
It is said that Yves Saint Laurent rued, “I wish I had invented blue jeans. They have expression, modesty, sex appeal, simplicity – all I hope for in my clothes.” Truth is, denims were originally invented by Jacob Davis and Levi Strauss, who according to Rahul Gandhi, could well have been small time tailors engaged in altering clothes at the Lajpat Nagar market. Right? Well, partially. While Levi Strauss arrived from Germany to San Francisco and set up Levi Strauss & Co that sold denim cloth, W Davis, was a tailor who actually stitched blankets and tents. When a customer asked for a pair of sturdy pants, Davis used the denim he bought from Levi Strauss & Co and placed rivets around pockets. Given its success, Davis and Strauss patented the pants and called them denim jeans.
As it happens, fashion becomes fashion when everyone wants to follow it. If the fifties were about marines and rock stars embracing denims, the sixties were about painted and embroidered denims - a symbol of rebellious teen freedom.
The goal obviously is to start a conversation on taboo topics and make sure that people don’t forget about it. Interestingly, earlier this year Topshop created a ‘Fake News Jeans’, I am assuming in the honour of President Trump and not the sanctimonious anchors who shout loud enough to break the crockery in my house.
My somewhat unreliable and alcoholic sources reveal that designers are already designing newsworthy denims for the Indian market. Specifically for Delhi, there is an ‘Anarchist Pret Line’ with special Dharna jeans that can be worn at work and also when you sleep on a sofa. Likewise, we have ‘Achche Din’ denims that will make you feel on top of the world even though there isn’t much to cheer about. And finally, a sturdy ‘Secular Line’ for khadi clad storm troopers that will enable the Mahagathbandhan to survive the test of time.
Given that the slim fit would be too uncomfortable for our pious pollies to get their jollies, Patanjali can design a baggy fit denim coloured with Indian Indigo held by cotton drawstrings. No points wrangling, because unlike wicked Wrangler, the Patanjali clothing line will be as hallowed as the home spun ‘khadi’. Maybe Patanjali can call their new jeans Born Players as an alternative to John Players. Even better would be Pevis instead of Levis because Pee instead of Lee would be too odd, no?
(Alka Gurha is a published author, award winning blogger and web contributor. She contributes for various websites like The Hoot, The Huffpost and many many more. She tweets @alkagurha. This is a personal blog. The views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them. )
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