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Arts

Uzbekistan's traditional carpets make a comeback

British adventurer helps to revive skills lost during communist rule

Women at work at the Khiva Silk Carpet Workshop in Khiva, Uzbekistan. The facility opened in 2001 with backing from sources including UNESCO. (All photos by Charukesi Ramadurai)

KHIVA, Uzbekistan -- After a hectic morning of sightseeing in Ichan Kala, the walled old city in Khiva, Uzbekistan, I was ready for a break from blue-tiled madrassas and minarets. While these monuments were jaw-droppingly beautiful, I needed respite from the relentless desert sun and the monotonous droning of my guide's voice. Shaking her loose, I retraced my steps toward a small doorway we had crossed a bit earlier in one of Ichan Kala's narrow lanes.

Khiva was once an influential trading post on the Silk Road, a network of routes that connected the East with the West for several centuries. Apart from the ancient monuments, I had been drawn to Khiva after reading British author Christopher Aslan Alexander's 2010 memoir "A Carpet Ride to Khiva," about setting up a carpet weaving workshop within Ichan Kala.

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