Sarah Chayes didn’t set out to be a soapmaker in Afghanistan. A Harvard scholar in medieval Islamic history, Peace Corps alum, and NPR reporter living in Paris, she had the perfect pedigree for journalism. But after 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan, she asked to be reassigned to Kabul where she became deeply involved with the fate and future of the Afghans. In 2002, she moved to Kandahar in southern Afghanistan and looked for ways to help– rebuilding homes, starting a dairy cooperative, making yogurt, and writing a book, The Punishment of Virtue. Then in 2005, she latched on to soap.
It’s not as wild an idea as you might think. Kandahar is like the Central Valley of California: with irrigation, it produces a veritable cornucopia of fruits and nuts, where pomegranates grow big as grapefruits and everything, including opium poppies, flourishes like wildflowers.
Chayes figured that if she could establish a cooperative to make high-end soaps, it would not only mean good jobs for co-op members, but also encourage local farmers to produce flowers, fruits and herbs instead of opium. And four years later, Arghand is experiencing the sweet smell of success – with 11 women and 8 men working cooperatively in a small factory producing some of the most luscious soaps and creams you can imagine.It’s like aromatherapy on steroids! Shaped like river stones, the soaps are made entirely by hand and jam-packed with restorative pomegranate oil, natural antioxidants, grapefruit seed extract, and fragrant essential oils.
From cracking the nuts to squeezing the pomegranates, the workers mold, cure, polish, and pack every bar by hand. From the Amandine soap loaded with wild almond butter oil to the Elixir of Artemis that’s tinged with turmeric to give it a joyous yellow hue, the soaps look like exotic marble – almost too pretty to use (but don’t let that stop you from lathering up)!
Arghand also has a new line of densely nourishing face and body creams packed with natural wild pistachio, pure apricot kernel and pomegranate oils that are rich with anti-oxidants and unsurpassed at fighting free radicals (like the Taliban). Speaking of which, every soap or cream you buy from Arghand helps support jobs for women and local agriculture in Afghanistan – and when women earn an income, that’s the most transformative of empowerment movements!
My $100 today goes to Arghand towards the purchase of an industrial nut cracker and to Sarah Chayes, who is still living in Kandahar and working through electricity outages (the factory is now 100% solar), corrupt government officials, and constant intimidation to provide peaceful economic opportunities for the Afghan people.
To donate, click here. To order your soaps online (or to find a specialty retailer carrying Arghand products near you) click here. At $8 a bar, Arghand soaps are a unique, delightful and meaningful present for truly gifted (and squeaky clean) givers.
Good luck in the new case!
I can’t thank all of you enough for your incredibly kind words. It really, really makes a difference to hear them. Sometimes the moral support is what really gets us over the humps. And there are plenty of those. On the other hand, the simple magic of these ingredients and the alchemy that occurs when we put them together, the magic of Arghand members’ sense of humor, through all they weather every day, is pretty inspiring, too. Jennie Green and I will be formulating a few more lotions and returning our massage oils to the market (maybe with a fragrant addition to that line-up come spring, too). Thanks so much for your support! Betty, I couldn’t have put together a better page myself.
While you can compare the climate of Kandahar to the Central Valley of California, Afghanistan is not California, and for a foreign woman to live there voluntarily with all the intimidation, corruption, electric outages and who knows what else, and, end up with a successful business where women can now earn a living wage, well I am speechless. Sarah Chayes is my hero.
Couldn’t agree with you more, Rosie!
Home Economics is thrilled to support Arghand. This story of determination and hard work is motivating and exemplary! This kind of effort is brilliantly pragmatic and the definition of sustainability. Our customers respond to the story of Arghand quite positively and are very happy with the soaps and scarves they purchase.
Bravo to the collective and Sarah Chayes for this outstanding and inspirational work.
May want to check out this Atlanta organization too.
http://www.ajc.com/news/gwinnett/nonprofit-uses-discarded-hotel-540062.html
Yes! I wrote about Global Soap Project on April 21: “Faith, Soap & Charity” — he’s a wonderful guy doing great work!
Another great story!!!
I have a bar of Arghand pomegranate soup by my sink right now. It feels good in your hand, is beautiful and lathers very nicely. They do look like hunks of marble! I got mine at Mingei in Decatur.
Judy
Judy, you are SUCH an early adopter! love it!!