The Mông, and the fabric of their life
Making
beautiful garments with flax has for long been a way of life for the Mông;
now, it is offering them a stable livelihood, Lương Thu Hương reports.
Linen has
been the fabric of life for the Mông people in Hà Giang Province for a long,
long time.
The
ingenuity of this ethnic minority in making this fabric from scratch, dyeing
it with different colours using no chemicals, and making beautiful garments
has turned every Mông woman into a colourful flower blooming amidst the rocky
mountains they call home.
In the past,
most linen garments, which take years to finish, were tailored for members
within just one family, but over the years, as more people discover the
beauty of the fabric and the work done on it, a joint effort is being made to
widen its reach.
The Hợp Tiến
Linen Co-operative in Lùng Tám Village, Quản Bạ District, is one of the
spearheads of this effort, and it has succeeded in marketing the linen
garments to the lowlands and beyond the country’s borders.
“Linen is
the treasure of Lùng Tám Village,” said Vàng Thị Mai, who heads the
co-operative. “Throughout Hà Giang Province, as long as there are Mông
People, there will be linen. However, it is Lùng Tám Village that has
succeeded in preserving, promoting and making our traditional products
flourish.”
At present,
the co-operative has 130 traditional looms, creating jobs for 135 people,
both villagers and others in the vicinity. All its nine production groups are
based in Lùng Tám, with every household getting involved in one stage or
other of the production process.
“Mông people
in the village are very happy and not anxious anymore, because our
traditional job has been successfully restored and developed, and we are able
to introduce one of our culture to both domestic and international friends,”
Mai said.
The Hợp Tiến
Co-operative makes more than traditional clothes. Using the traditional
textiles and patterns that have been passed down from their ancestors, they
have creatively produced a variety of modern household decorative items like
pillow cases, wallets, curtains and tablecloth.
Making the
fabric is a lot of work. Mai said the whole process includes more than 21
stages, all of which are done manually.
First, the
flax plants are planted and tended on the most fertile farmland. They are
harvested after over two months and dried to make threads. When splitting the
threads to get the sheaths, the Mông woman has to be extremely careful in
order to acquire threads of the same lengths and not break them halfway.
The flax
sheaths, bound in sheaves, will be crushed in stone mortars to soften them,
until only the tough threads remain. These will be bound once again to make
longer threads. After boiling them several times in water mixed with ash and
bee wax, the linen threads become softer and whiter. This is when the Mông
women bring their looms into play.
The cloth
that is woven will be washed again to whiten them as much as possible. The
next step is spreading the cloth on to logs and flattening them with
flagstones that have been scraped with bee wax.
The
colouring stage is also a meticulous process. The cloth is dyed with natural
colours of extracted from local plants. In order to get the correct shade of
indigo black, the weavers have to dye the cloth several times over several
days. The cloth is submerged in the dye for about an hour, drained and
submerged again. This happens five to six times, or even more.
The colours
of the cloth are determined significantly by weather conditions. If it is
sunny, it takes from three to four days to finish dyeing the cloth, but if it
rains, the process can take up to two months.
“Despite all
the hardship, it is the natural colours and handmade production that make our
products unique,” Mai said.
Reviving a tradition
Mai says
every member of the Hợp Tiến Co-operative has worked hard and dedicated
themselves to the success of restoring the community’s traditional skill.
Having been
the chairwoman of the commune women’s association for more than 20 years
(1989 – 2006), Mai understands well the difficult lives that Mông women have
experienced.
“The
villagers used to live in great poverty. No matter how hard they worked, both
at home and on the farm, they were still poor,” the 54-year-old artisan
recalled.
“Mông women
are not only industrious but also skillful. At the age of 13, besides helping
their families work on the farm, they have been able to spin, weave,
embroider or sew. I thought, why we can’t we weave our fabric to sell to
others and better our lives?”
The
traditional weaving tradition of the Mông was struggling against the
appearance of modern clothes in their markets towards the end of the 1990s.
Young girls did not stick to the habit of working on the looms like their
ancestors and fewer women were wearing their traditional, homemade dresses.
The skill of weaving, passed through generations, faced the risk of
disappearing.
Wanting to
preserve the cultural treasures of her community and to improve their living
standards, Mai, with the support of her husband, encouraged other villagers
to contribute funds to establish and join the Hợp Tiến Linen Weaving Centre,
which was set up in her house in 1998. There were barely 10 members then.
In 2000, Mai
received support from a project aiming to preserve and develop traditional
craft villages, launched under a co-operation programme between Vietnam and
Sweden.
A year
later, in 2001, her efforts received another boost when the local People’s
Committee allocated land for setting up the Hợp Tiến Linen Weaving Co-operative,
enabling the construction of a workshop, helping stabilising production.
Soon, Mai
realised that it was not enough to produce, the products had to be marketed.
“At first, I
travelled down the mountains alone, bringing the products along with me, to
join many trade fairs in Hà Nội and introduce them to potential customers,”
Mai said.
The
opportunities to visit various souvenir, art and handicraft shops made her
more aware of what the market demanded, what would sell.
“We needed
to make many more products of better quality, adding souvenir items like
scarves, handbags and tablecloth.
“International
visitors, particularly those from Japan, French and Canada, enjoy our line of
products and their indigo colour.”
Many of them
have travelled long distances to reach Lùng Tám Village and signed long-term
contracts with the co-operative.
Outside support
To sustain
its growth, the Hợp Tiến Cooperative has collaborated with the Centre for
Development Support of Vietnamese Trade Villages and Craftlink (a not-for-profit
organisation seeking new markets for traditional artisans) to promote and
introduce their linen to international markets.
The demand
for the linen products of high quality and unique patterns increased rapidly,
together with the number of villagers joining the cooperative.
A
co-operation agreement with Association Batik International, a French
organisation focusing on vocational training, has opened a new page in the
development of the co-operative. Under the agreement, its members have the
opportunity to get more training and enhance their skills, enabling them to
make products more beautiful and of higher quality.
At present,
the co-operative’s traditional linen products are sold in souvenir stores
throughout Việt Nam, including in prestigious hotels like Nikko and Horison.
They are also found in some outlets in France, Japan, Canada, Britain and
Switzerland.
Co-operative
members are happy to see their traditional skill thrive and happier that it provides
them with a decent income.
“Working
in the co-operative provides me with a stable income of about VNĐ2.3 million
(US$100 approx) per month after harvest,” said Sùng Thị Mị.
“I do not
have to travel far to work anymore and my children can attend school.”
The best
news is that more and more Mông girls have become interested in weaving, and
this enables them to support their families financially.
Hạng Dương
Thành, vice chairman of the Quản Bạ District People’s Committee, said the
administration was taking the first steps towards developing community-based
tourism in Lùng Tám Village.
“This will
offer an opportunity for visitors to experience local life as they discover
the Hà Giang Stone Plateau.
“Traditional
linen products of the village will become souvenirs that travel to different
countries, bearing features of highland cultures.”
Viet Nam News |
Chủ Nhật, 20 tháng 11, 2016
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