{"id":26593,"date":"2016-04-27T12:13:09","date_gmt":"2016-04-27T16:13:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/?p=26593"},"modified":"2018-05-15T12:18:43","modified_gmt":"2018-05-15T16:18:43","slug":"a-pouf-could-change-lives-in-india-with-help-from-fius-international-business-honor-society","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/2016\/04\/a-pouf-could-change-lives-in-india-with-help-from-fius-international-business-honor-society\/","title":{"rendered":"A \u201cpouf\u201d could change lives in India, with help from FIU\u2019s International Business Honor Society."},"content":{"rendered":"
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It was a concept born in Venezuela and nurtured in Miami by Florida International University (FIU) business students. Now, it\u2019s flowering in India, where it could improve the lives of women and girls in a village ravaged by poverty.<\/p>\n
Meet the Moroccan pouf, an ottoman-style hassock with a production plan that offers a path to business accomplishment for a deserving population.<\/p>\n
In March, nine FIU College of Business students, all studying international business and members of the International Business Honors Society, went to the northern Indian village of Bandhwari, near New Delhi, armed with pouf patterns and a business plan that builds on abilities the women already possess.<\/p>\n
Producing the hassock is giving the village\u2019s women and girls a chance to start a business and change lives often circumscribed by a lack of education and traditional ideas of women\u2019s roles.<\/p>\n
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\u201cWe are looking to empower women who can\u2019t leave the village to get an education,\u201d said Sofia Garcia, a junior and marketing director of the society,\u00a0who dreamed up the pouf idea.<\/p>\n
Garcia, long interested in arts and crafts, has a close cousin who studies fashion design and makes a similar product in Venezuela, where she and Garcia both grew up. \u201cShe taught me how to make the initial pattern,\u201d Garcia said.<\/p>\n
The pouf production concept was an immediate hit last fall when the international business students were seeking an overseas project, said David Wernick, senior lecturer in the COB\u2019s Department of Management and International Business. He took on the role of faculty advisor to the society this academic year and believed the annual trips \u2013 a service and business-skills focused alternative to spring break — could be more ambitious.<\/p>\n
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Wernick had visited Bandhwari in 2012, on a professional development trip, and was struck by its poverty. \u201cThe local schoolhouse didn\u2019t even have desks or chairs so the kids had to sit on the floor. And the teachers only bothered showing up half the time. It was a really sad situation, yet the little kids were so spirited and had so much energy and joy in their eyes,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n
When he presented the concept of working in Bandhwari to the honor society students, they felt Garcia\u2019s pouf proposal would match wonderfully with the sewing skills many of the Bandhwari women already possessed. The Miami logistics firm WTDC, where Garcia has an internship, awarded her a $1,000 scholarship to help fund the trip.<\/p>\n