Srinagar, July 7 -- In a small, sunlit room in Srinagar, Zahida Begum bends over a fine Pashmina shawl, guiding her needle through delicate threads. Her fingers move with practiced ease, but this time, the shawl is not for a local trader.
It's headed to a customer in Stockholm, a connection made with the tap of her son's smartphone.
For years, Zahida's craft was treated as just another piece of heritage slipping into the past. Demand was falling, brokers were taking the lion's share, and artisans like Zahida were earning barely enough to continue.
But something is shifting in Kashmir.
The intricate art of the Valley is finding new life. Kashmiri crafts, once struggling to survive, are now reaching the world. Not through chance, but th...
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