Nguyen Huy Luan hangs newly made chicken-feather dusters to dry at his house on the outskirts of Hanoi. Hoang Dinh Nam / AFP / June 6, 2017
Nguyen Huy Luan hangs newly made chicken-feather dusters to dry at his house on the outskirts of Hanoi. Hoang Dinh Nam / AFP / June 6, 2017
Nguyen Huy Luan hangs newly made chicken-feather dusters to dry at his house on the outskirts of Hanoi. Hoang Dinh Nam / AFP / June 6, 2017
Nguyen Huy Luan hangs newly made chicken-feather dusters to dry at his house on the outskirts of Hanoi. Hoang Dinh Nam / AFP / June 6, 2017

Done and dusted? Vietnam’s chicken-feather cleaners face stiff competition


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HANOI // Fluffy, soft and easy to buy off the back of a bike: Vietnam’s chicken feather dusters have ruled the roost for generations.

But artisans fear for their future as buyers turn to cheaper alternatives.

The dusters, ubiquitous across the country’s leafy capital, have long been a staple in Vietnamese homes to clear cobwebs from ancestral altars or hard-to-reach corners of the house.

But today, cheap synthetic dusters have flooded the market – the latest influx of mass-produced goods to chip away at traditional artisans’ profits.

“We don’t earn as much money as we could in other jobs, but I do this job to keep my family tradition alive,” Nguyen Huy Tho, 36, said near his stuffy garage, filled with hanging lines of feather plumes.

His family has been making the dusters for more than a century, and unlike his five sisters who all work in office jobs or as teachers, he decided to follow in his father’s footsteps after graduating from college.

It was once a soaring trade. Mr Tho used to earn about US$350 (Dh1,285) per month selling the dusters, but today profits are down by a third.

His 85-year-old grandfather, who still helps out on occasion, says many young people are now looking for better-paying jobs.

“Most people now think about earning good money, but this job is tedious, like making a toothpick,” Nguyen Huy De said.

Each duster takes about two hours to make, and they sell on the streets of Hanoi for about $7.

Traditionally, families sold feathers to door-to-door collectors after a chicken feast, with sales spiking around traditional holidays.

But today, Mr Tho’s family buys feathers from chicken wholesalers, as the duty of killing chickens has mostly moved out of the home.

Even though the feathers are easier to find, there are only about 10 families still making the dusters in his village in Trieu Khuc – on the outskirts of Hanoi, once a renowned hub for the trade.

Bit it’s not just families like Mr Tho’s feeling the squeeze.

Vendor Nguyen Minh Quang says sales have dipped in recent years, but he still cycles 50km into Hanoi daily to peddle the dusters.

“Now that there are plastic dusters in the market, fewer traditional feather dusters are sold. I don’t get much money selling them, and I get really tired cycling to Hanoi every day.”

* Agence France-Presse

Volunteers offer workers a lifeline

Community volunteers have swung into action delivering food packages and toiletries to the men.

When provisions are distributed, the men line up in long queues for packets of rice, flour, sugar, salt, pulses, milk, biscuits, shaving kits, soap and telecom cards.

Volunteers from St Mary’s Catholic Church said some workers came to the church to pray for their families and ask for assistance.

Boxes packed with essential food items were distributed to workers in the Dubai Investments Park and Ras Al Khaimah camps last week. Workers at the Sonapur camp asked for Dh1,600 towards their gas bill.

“Especially in this year of tolerance we consider ourselves privileged to be able to lend a helping hand to our needy brothers in the Actco camp," Father Lennie Connully, parish priest of St Mary’s.

Workers spoke of their helplessness, seeing children’s marriages cancelled because of lack of money going home. Others told of their misery of being unable to return home when a parent died.

“More than daily food, they are worried about not sending money home for their family,” said Kusum Dutta, a volunteer who works with the Indian consulate.

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