Sewing Machines in Vietnam, 2019

By Hanh Nguyen, GM of The Dariu Foundation (TDF) in Vietnam
Spring 2019 Newsletter

Our vision is creating a positive impact for 1 million people by 2025 using microfinance and education. On the path to advance our mission, we have been kindly supported by generous partners, one of which is Pedals for Progress (P4P) / Sewing Peace (SP).

In 2018, TDF got one container of 500 used bicycles granted to the most disadvantaged students and 30 sewing machines to low-income women in Da Nang city. The sewing machines were given to women with unstable employment and of low-income families. The program was aimed at supporting the selected women to generate jobs and improve their incomes. In addition to the sewing machines, TDF also provided each of them with micro-credit of $1,000 as working capital for the business.


In December 2018, we visited the beneficiaries and learned that most of them had better employment and more income. Lanh Nguyen, a 40-year old mother, was one of the program members. She told us that her family had a hard time before she got a sewing machine from Sewing Peace via The Dariu Foundation. She tried different jobs but her family’s situation remained vulnerable. She had to work from dawn to dusk, but still could not make ends meet. She had no savings.

In 2014 she got a job at a garment factory more than 7 miles from her home. Every day she rode to work with her old bike, and it took her more than an hour for the ride. In 2016, the factory cut its staff; Lanh kept her job but it was changed to part-time. Her income was reduced by half. At this time her children started school, which made their life all the more difficult.

In 2018, she got an SP sewing machine in a Dariu program and started a business at home with three other women in the village. “I told my peers that we need to work together so that we can provide sewing services for the local companies. If it is only me, the company would not give me their jobs, because I could not meet the deadline and the quantity,” Lanh explained. “Now, five other women have joined us, so we can take bigger orders. I’m very happy that we can work together like a small company where every member contributes their own machine, and a little capital,” she added.

Now each member in the workshop has a stable income and personal savings of $2 per day. Their plan is to attract another 20 local women from the same background to join their workshop in 2019.

“With sewing machines from SP and micro-loans from TDF, we have been able to start and expand our business, creating stable income for our families and earning money for our children’s education,” said Lanh Nguyen.

Thanks to generous support from Sewing Peace and the Dariu Foundation, tens of families have improved their quality of life and earned greater respect in their families and communities.