To talk about jewelry, I will propose an analysis in two parts: on the one hand, what is being done, the current situation and on the other hand, the ideal.
What is being done is a multitude of small workshops, each managed by a jeweller who does everything, all alone, who does not depend on anyone or any higher authority that manages the profession, who deals with collective problems and who has a precise idea of the future and improvement of the profession. It's every man for himself: you have your customers, you have your own way of doing things, you charge the price you want, you punch or not according to your desires, it's letting go pushed to anarchy.
On every street corner there is a small workshop. Has he been trained? How long did this training last? To which family does it belong? Is he a professional or not? Is he competent? Does he have good morals? No one knows. That's what exists is all about.
The ideal would be to sort through this multitude, to list the artisan jewelers. To do this, jewellers have organized themselves, they have created a national association to which all jewelers can belong, for this, it is enough to be a practicing jeweler, to buy the membership card, to have a workshop or to work in a workshop.
The National Association of Jewellers of Senegal, created in July 1992, under the impetus of Mr. Ngagne NIANG, renewed its bodies at a general assembly during which the new bodies described a program. And it is this program that could constitute the ideal to which the profession aspires.
This program consists of training jewellers because currently the training of young people is done on the job in a family jewelry store where they are installed because they have not made it in their studies at school, although this is not always the case because today we see young people with university degrees who have chosen to be jewelers. Once the training is done, the jewelers must be able to set up normally, that is to say give them access to credit to allow the financing of this installation among other things. Once established, the problem to be solved will be that of the raw material, the essential material for working, namely gold.
It should be noted that in Senegal there is no official or even private state body responsible for selling gold to jewelers. what we note is that there is no counter for the purchase and sale of precious metals in Senegal where jewelers can go to buy their raw material and work. The consequence is that there is no official price of gold insofar as everyone manages to obtain their raw material. The price of gold in Senegal is not officially known, it rises or falls according to demand or supply without all this being formalized. There is no gold counter in Senegal, all the more curiously because Senegal produces gold in its southern region.
Which is all the more curious and bizarre when Senegal is the only country where jewelry is a family affair, in fact one is born a jeweler one does not become one.
Once installed, the big problem that the jeweler has to solve is to fill the void created by the absence of this raw material. This lack of a source of gold supply causes major problems which are:
The conditions that will allow a successful career in jewellery:
I would also like to deplore the absence of fairs, places where jewelers can compete in a healthy emulation that will help to whip the creative imagination of craftsmen. It is also the absence of competitions such as the MARTEAU D'OR which has already been organized, or the participation in fashion shows.
Professionalization also requires a strong organization that sets up a structure called the ABNS where people recruited for their competence work in charge of thinking and implementing the ideas put forward by the base, which is made up of jewelers who can then devote themselves entirely to their work in the workshop. This office would take care of the administrative work. To do this, it is urgent that monthly contributions be set and released on time to pay the operating costs of this office.
It is a profession of ambitious men and women, who handle a lot of money, an extremely rewarding profession because it produces added value, but which will live forever as long as the problems cited and decried for several decades are not solved, first and foremost by a firm will of jewelers to get out of it by themselves by making the necessary sacrifices and efforts, and if possible by state aid.
Otherwise, the jewellery industry will remain the poor relation of all the trades that make up the craft sector, even though it employs thousands of people.