{keywords}
A Mong man helps two Mong women plant indigo for dyeing cloths. — VNS Photos Hong Minh

She had never thought things would be reversed and her husband would be helping her at work.

Previously the 30-year-old mother of two cared for the children at home in Muong Hoa Commune and worked in the family’s maize field.

Last year, Pang joined a hemp-planting group organised by the commune Women’s Union, and which she planted hemp in her family’s fields to produce fibre to weave cloth. The purchase was ensured by a trader, which enabled Pang to start earning money in her own right.

Pang understands that planting 10 to 15 bowls, equivalent to four to five kilos, of hemp seed a year, will grow a large area of hemp plants.

“With such amount of work, my husband helped me in tilling the land and fencing the field,” she said.

Pang said she felt lucky to get support from her husband when she joined the hemp-planting group as some other women did not get the same support from their husbands.

{keywords}

Sung Thi Thu, head of the Muong Hoa Commune’s Women’s Union, checks on her hemp garden. 

 

Sung Thi Thu, head of the Muong Hoa Commune’s Women’s Union, said the group was set up in co-ordination with the Sa Pa-based Lan Rung (Wild Orchid) Company with support from the Gender Responsive Equitable Agriculture and Tourism (GREAT) Programme, an initiative launched in 2018, funded by the Australian Government.

Thu said hemp plants were part of life for Mong ethnic people since they were born.

“In the past, we only planted hemp in small areas to get fibre for household cloth so the harvest was not large and did not bring back profit,” she said.

Thu said that thanks to the project, Lan Rung Company had organised training courses for local women, helping enhance their empowerment through planting hemp plants and weaving cloth.

Perfect chain

In the neighbouring Ban Khoang Commune, another group of Tay and Mong ethnic women is also benefiting from the project of Lan Rung Company.

{keywords}

Tay woman Dao Thi Lan (right) guides her eldest daughter on the techniques of indigo dyeing.

 

Like other Tay women, Dao Thi Lan, 65, started making clothes when she was teenager. At 18, she decided to sell her necklace – a dowry from her mother – to get a sewing machine and started to learn how to make clothes. She has mastered dyeing clothes with indigo and brocading traditional patterns for more than 40 years. The techniques have been taught to her three daughters and two daughters-in-law and her grand daughters.

Lan and her family have also joined the project led by Lan Rung through a group of ethnic minority women making brocade textiles and clothes.

“In the past, we only made clothes for family members. Sometimes we could sell to foreign tourists, but it wasn't stable,” she said.

Lan said that thanks to the project, indigo dyed clothes and pattern brocade products could be sold regularly.

“Especially when the COVID-19 pandemic happened and we did not have foreign tourists coming to the commune, selling to Lan Rung Company became the main income of my family,” she said.

According to Vo Van Tai, director of Lan Rung, the company has established groups totalling more than 200 ethnic women in five communes in Lao Cai Province’s Sa Pa District to plant hemp and indigo. This helps ensure a stable supply of materials, as well as support groups of weavers and brocade makers to preserve traditional handicrafts. Up to 50 per cent of products are sold to tourists and big hotels.

All participants will get training and be provided with seedlings, weaving tools and brocade designs.

“All qualified products will be purchased immediately,” he said.

Tai said it was not easy to start the project.

“First of all, the material zone was limited, we had to persuade local people to plant hemp and indigo in large areas besides their food plants,” he said.

“Human resources were also a problem as young ethnic people now tend to go to big cities to work in service industries so traditional handicrafts are gradually falling into oblivion,” he said.

{keywords}
Director of Lan Rung Company Vo Van Tai introduces brocade products made by ethnic women.

Tai said he had to find ways to approach the local women and persuade them to work for him by encouraging them to do familiar work like planting trees, weaving and dyeing. He was also thankful to the support of GREAT in his operation.

“I am happy that the project has been going well. Local women have got initial benefits and been empowered more than before,” he said.  VNS

Hong Minh

Ta Oi ethnic minority preserve traditional Zeng weaving

Ta Oi ethnic minority preserve traditional Zeng weaving

The traditional craft of Zeng (brocade) weaving has long been the pride of the Ta Oi ethnic group in A Luoi district, Thua Thien–Hue province.

Weaving – traditional craft of Tay ethnic minority

Weaving – traditional craft of Tay ethnic minority

Brocades are typical weaving and sewing products of the Tay people in the northern mountainous province of Cao Bang.