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How do disabilities affect peoples lives

Saigon cobbler dedicated to enabling the disabled to walk smoothly with bespoke footwear

March 7, 2021 by tuoitrenews.vn

Over the past four decades, Ho Chi Minh City cobbler Bui Thi Tuyet has worked tirelessly to make sure the bespoke shoes she builds are a perfect fit for customers with foot impairments, helping them walk comfortably and smoothly.

Able-bodied people may take shoes for granted, but what many with foot impairments dream of is just being able to don a pair of shoes that perfectly fit their feet and walk gracefully, particularly on their wedding day.

Tuyet is well aware of this and has been single-mindedly dedicated to helping her customers with such special needs.

For nearly 40 years, the 57-year-old woman has been running her in-laws’ shoemaking shop called Tuyet Tien, coined from her and her husband’s names.

Her small house, doubling as her workshop, is nestled in a ‘village’ known for its century-old shoemaking tradition next to Calmette Bridge connecting District 1 and District 4 in Ho Chi Minh City.

Snuggled in the District 4 end and run by Tuyet herself and her sister-in-law after being passed down for several generations, the shop brims with shoes needing work, morsels of leather and echoes from the footsteps of customers needing help.

Bui Thi Tuyet works with high dexterity on bespoke shoes for deformed feet at her family-run shoe shop, nestled in a century-old shoemaking quarter in District 4, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Photo: Le Van/ Tuoi Tre

Bui Thi Tuyet works with high dexterity on bespoke shoes for deformed feet at her family-run shoe shop, nestled in a century-old shoemaking quarter in District 4, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Photo: Le Van / Tuoi Tre

Dedicated professional

It is clear Tuyet is proud of the shoes she makes, and she goes the extra mile to look for materials and leather to make her footwear pieces stand out from the rest and best suit her customers’ special needs.

A local resident, she began learning the trade when she married into a family running a shoemaking business.

Now, almost 40 years later, Tuyet said her clientele keeps expanding and her items have never failed to win her customers’ hearts.

Her clientele includes professional dancers, including Hoang Ich Hau, who places regular orders with Tuyet for dancing clogs despite living in the north.

However, Tuyet’s reputation does not rest on her famous clients and fashion sense.

Her unique cobbling skills culminate in thousands of her customized shoes for her disabled clients to boost their mobility and confidence as they look their best in daily life or for special celebrations like weddings.

With or without impairments, all of Tuyet’s customers welcome her exquisite leatherwork, craftsmanship, and dedication with glowing praise.

Some of her custom-made pairs fetch up to millions of dong apiece, Tuyet said. (VND1 million = US$43).

Many of her customers from different parts of the country make orders for a couple of pairs, even five pairs, at a time, to make sure their trips all the way to Ho Chi Minh City for feet measurements are really worth it, Tuyet said while showing her homemade chat app Zalo inbox brimming with orders from V.I.P. customers as well as those with disabilities or budget constraints, or both.

Tuyet always strives to bring out her best for the customers.

Even though she had a full plate fulfilling orders for the Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday, which lasted one week last month, the seasoned cobbler insisted she retrieve and adjust a pair which a customer ordered as a gift for their mother to wear during the festive occasion.

Shoes that fit special feet

The first days in building shoes for those with foot deformation were a struggle, and it took a great deal of trial and error, with Tuyet sometimes spending days on a single pair of shoes.

“Customers are my greatest masters. There were times I just wanted to give up on a technically demanding pair,” she shared.

“I just went out with the best of my ability to finish one pair before moving on to 10 and 20.

“I just got blown away with the calling without realizing it.”

Her main clients are people with legs of different lengths and club foot, or twisted feet.

Her shoes must reduce the effect of the impairment or at least conceal it, which is why they must be specially made.

Tuyet’s main source of job satisfaction comes from the fact that customers who come in walking with a bad limp often leave walking with much greater ease in their specially-made shoes.

Among her patrons is Thanh Phuong, who lost almost all of her foot and has one leg shorter than the other.

“I’m still not able to fulfill her order placed from the summer,” Tuyet said.

She added she recently had to adjust the price for Phuong’s shoes slightly upward this year from the current VND300,000 ($13) a pair due to the rise in material price and the impact of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Tuyet recalled her first meeting with a special customer, a boy the age of her youngest son, who came to see her from Dong Nai Province, after watching a video clip on YouTube a few years ago.

Do Thanh Tan, one of Bui Thi Tuyet’s customers, looks his best in shoes built by her to conceal the difference in his legs’ length for his wedding held in October 2020 in Thai Nguyen Province, northern Vietnam in this supplied photo.

Do Thanh Tan, one of Bui Thi Tuyet’s customers, looks his best in shoes built by her to conceal the difference in his legs’ length for his wedding held in October 2020 in Thai Nguyen Province, northern Vietnam in this supplied photo.

The mother of three was moved to tears at the sight of the boy moving awkwardly with his two tiny stubs of leg wrapped in socks.

Tuyet customized contoured shoes to fit his severely deformed legs and the boy has become one of her regular clients since.

In late October last year, Do Thanh Tan, a young teacher residing in the northern province of Thai Nguyen, had a wedding ceremony beyond his wildest dreams.

Part of the miracle came to life because of Tuyet’s shoes that glammed him up for his big day.

Tan, who has one leg 15 centimeters shorter than the other, said he is very grateful to Tuyet.

“It’s really difficult to find shoes for people with my condition. They are never available in shops,” Tan shared, adding he had one shop in his hometown build a pair for him, but they ended up too high in one sole, causing him a lot of pain.

“Tuyet’s shoes are a perfect fit, I can walk with much ease now and my legs are now only 1-2 centimeters imbalanced,” he said.

Tuyet also gifted him a pair of sandals for daily use.

Nguyen Thi Hao, from Lam Dong Province in the Central Highlands, shares Tan’s foot condition and experience.

Five years ago, the woman, who also lost half of her foot, managed to track Tuyet down for bespoke pairs of shoes.

“Believe it or not? Until I met this cobbler [Tuyet], I had kept dreaming for nearly 50 years of perfectly fitting shoes so I could look my best,” the 54-year-old woman shared, noting it is not just about how shoes fit, but how they look and feel.

Hao cheerfully showed her wedding photos featuring her walking gracefully in Tuyet’s shoes on her important day.

Another female customer came all the way from a locality in the north to take her 70-year-old father with club foot to Tuyet.

It took Tuyet nearly one month to build the shoes for the father, who had always walked barefoot as no cobblers were willing to make shoes for his twisted feet.

Tuyet’s work came in extremely useful with the father, who then proudly walked her daughter down the aisle in the new loafers on her big day.

Tuyet shared unlike other cobblers who excel in only some phases of shoemaking, she has to master every detail in building custom shoes for deformed feet.

“No matter how difficult the items are, they will finally come into shape if I put serious work into them,” Tuyet said of what has kept her passion ablaze.

“I must be ‘unique’ so my special customers will come to see me. That’s also where I can help them most,” she said with a smile, adding she has built thousands of such special shoes throughout the years.

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Hanoi to spend US$149 million to aid 1.4 million people hit by pandemic

April 29, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – Hanoi’s authorities will try to disburse a part of the money to support people in need before April 30.

Hanoi’s government is about to spend more than VND3,500 billion (US$149 million) to support some 1.4 million vulnerable people directly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, local media quoted Vice Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee Ngo Van Quy as saying on April 28.

Vice Chairman of the municipal People’s Committee Ngo Van Quy speaks at the conference. Photo: HNM

Quy said Hanoi’s authorities will try to disburse a part of the money to support people in need before April 30, including revolutionary contributors, social beneficiaries and poor people. In this tranche, the support is estimated to benefit about 414,000 people with a total budget of over VND500 billion (US$21,279).

For the speedy disbursement of the relief money, Minister of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs Dao Ngoc Dung has encouraged localities to use banking and online public services.

On April 24, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc signed a decision to roll out a relief package worth VND62 trillion (US$2.7 billion) to support vulnerable people directly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The package covers six beneficiary groups who would receive financial support in cash during three months starting April.

The funding for the package would come from state and provincial budgets, including savings from regular expenditures for meetings, workshops, abroad working trips, festivals and others.

In addition to direct financial support, workers are entitled for deferral in contribution for pensions and death gratuity funds in 12 months.

Workers could submit application for financial support via postal services, email, and fax, among others without having to seek certification from local authorities.

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Vietnamese government to support unskilled laborers affected by Covid-19

May 8, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – The support package delivery must ensure seriousness, publicity, transparency.

The Vietnamese government will support unskilled laborers directly affected by Covid-19 pandemic from May 10, local media reported.

It is expected that as of May 15, the government will finish paying the relief money to beneficiary groups, including revolutionary contributors, social assistance beneficiaries and poor people.

At a recent regular meeting of the Vietnamese government, Minister of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs Dao Ngoc Dung affirmed that the support package delivery must ensure seriousness, publicity, transparency.

“We have not received any negative feedback from the localities regarding the payment of the financial aids,” Dung said.

So far, 63/63 localities in Vietnam have delivered the welfare packages to the people in need; 40/63 provinces and cities have paid over VND20 trillion (US$855.57 million) for revolutionary contributors, social assistance beneficiaries and poor people.

People in Nguyen Trai ward, Ha Dong district receive government aid. Photo: Thuy Truc

At a recent regular meeting of the Vietnamese government, Minister of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs Dao Ngoc Dung affirmed that the support package delivery must ensure seriousness, publicity, transparency.

“We have not received any negative feedback from the localities regarding the payment of the financial aids,” Dung said.

So far, 63/63 localities in Vietnam have delivered the welfare packages to the people in need; 40/63 provinces and cities have paid over VND20 trillion (US$855.57 million) for revolutionary contributors, social assistance beneficiaries and poor people.

On April 24, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc signed a decision to roll out a relief package worth VND62 trillion (US$2.7 billion) to support vulnerable people directly affected by Covid-19.

The package covers six beneficiary groups who would receive financial support in cash during three months starting April.

The funding for the package would come from state and provincial budgets, including savings from regular expenditures for meetings, workshops, abroad working trips, festivals and others.

In addition to direct financial support, workers are entitled for deferral in contribution for pensions and death gratuity funds in 12 months.

Workers could submit application for financial support via postal services, email, and fax, among others, without having to seek certification from local authorities.

Hanoi urgently identifies the beneficiaries

There are three groups of employees entitled to benefit from the US$2.7 billion package, including employees whose labor contracts were suspended, those taking leave without payment; laid-off employees not eligible for unemployment benefits; and workers who have no labor contracts and have lost jobs.

The Hanoi Department of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs has requested district People’s Committees to screen 1.477 million employees entitled to receive the aids, of them 840,000 are people without labor contracts and have lost their jobs. Currently, the districts keep identifying the beneficiaries in accordance with the process and procedures.

Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Labor, War Invalids and Social Affairs Nguyen Hong Dan said that his department has made a written request and guidelines for identifying people affected by Covid-19 for assistance.

In order to identify the right beneficiaries, the city’s authorities will ask the districts to set up a review council headed by the Chairpersons of the local People’s Committee, Dan added.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Vietnamese government, unskilled laborers, Covid-19 pandemic, government supported business, government supported cell phone program, government supported child care, government supported courses, government supported housing, government supported programs, government supported mortgages, government supported cell phones, unskilled labor, unskilled labor jobs, jobs for unskilled labor, entrepreneurship government support

Hanoi timely aids people hit by Covid-19 pandemic

May 5, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – Many needy people said they felt touched when receiving the aid from Hanoi’s government, because this is timely attention.

Districts in Hanoi have disbursed more than VND3,500 billion (US$149 million) to support people hit by the Covid-19 pandemic, Kinhtedothi.vn reported.

Earlier, on April 29, Vice Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Ngo Van Quy signed a decision to disburse a part of the money to support people in need, including revolutionary contributors, social assistance beneficiaries and poor people.

People in Yen Nghia ward, Ha Dong district receive governmental aid. Photo: Kinhtedothi.vn

In this period, the aid is estimated to benefit about 414,000 people with a total budget of over VND505.6 billion (US$21.7 million).

Deputy Director of the Hanoi Department of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs Nguyen Hong Dan said as of May 3, many districts had given out the money to the right people.

By May 4 afternoon, Hanoi has basically completed delivering the support.

Head of Division of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs of Cau Giay district Nguyen Quang Hong said that the disbursement has been carried out with transparency and timeliness to support 3,310 people in the district with a total budget of nearly VND5 billion (US$213,004).

Many needy people said they felt touched when receiving the aid from Hanoi’s government, because this is timely attention.

“During the social distancing period due to Covid-19, my son-in-law and my daughter lost their jobs, and we have two children to support, thus, life has been very hard. I’m very touched since this assistance comes at the right moment,” said Truong Do Chuyen, a veteran.

On April 24, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc signed a decision to roll out a relief package worth VND62 trillion (US$2.7 billion) to support vulnerable people directly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

The package covers six beneficiary groups who would receive financial support in cash during three months starting from April.

The funding for the package would come from state and provincial budgets, including savings from regular expenditures for meetings, workshops, abroad working trips, festivals and others.

In addition to direct financial support, workers are entitled for deferral in contribution for pensions and death gratuity funds in 12 months.

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The aged-old weaving trade in the life of Cham people in Ninh Thuận

December 17, 2020 by en.vietnamplus.vn

In recent years, the brocade weaving village in My Nghiep Village, Ninh Phuoc District, Ninh Thuan Province has become a favorite destination for tourists.

Traditional brocade products in My Nghiep village have a special attraction not only because of their sophisticated and unique patterns, but also the richness and diversity of colors, designs, and types.

Threads and shuttles keep going back and forth, as well as the lives of many Cham women, day after day sitting in front of the loom, weaving a scarf, a dress …

Each person has a reason to follow the trade. Grandmothers teach mothers, mothers teach their children. Then the weaving trade has become an indispensable part of the culture of the Cham people for hundreds of years.

The colorful brocade panels with meticulous patterns and the sound of the looming day after day can be considered as an affirmation of the Cham women: They will live with the trade inherited from ancestors by love and pride./.

VNA

Filed Under: Uncategorized weaving, Cham, village, Politics, post trade life cycle, 4 year olds in old people's home programme, 4 year olds visit old peoples home, auden old people's home, god.puts people.in your life.for a reason quotes, simple mobile phones for old people, equity trade life cycle, life quotes famous people, old people losing memory, trade life cycle process, jobs helping old people, young people age

ADB to provide US$2.5 million to support Vietnam disaster response

November 9, 2020 by hanoitimes.vn

The Hanoitimes – ADB’s grant will augment the wider government response to deliver immediate, life-saving assistance to people who need it the most.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a US$2.5 million grant to assist Vietnam in providing emergency and humanitarian services to residents affected by the recent floods in the country’s central region.

ADB’s grant will augment the wider government response to people who need it the most.

“We commend the Vietnamese government for their quick emergency response to the disaster,” said ADB Country Director for Vietnam Andrew Jeffries. “ADB’s grant will augment the wider government response to deliver immediate, life-saving assistance to people who need it the most, especially people who were already experiencing adverse economic impacts due to the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) pandemic.”

The grant is funded by the Asia Pacific Disaster Response Fund, which was designed to provide support to ADB’s developing members affected by major natural disasters.

Since October 6, the central region of Vietnam has experienced prolonged and heavy rains, storm surge, and strong winds, leading to severe flooding and landslides. As of October 29, 214 people have been killed or reported missing, according to the Vietnam Disaster Management Authority.

About 7.7 million Vietnamese live in the areas damaged by the flooding. That includes 1.5 million people in 9 central provinces who were directly affected and about 380,000 houses have been damaged or destroyed.

ADB has been working with other development partners to support the government’s disaster relief efforts, including assessing the impact of the disaster and the needs for assistance in the central provinces. ADB’s assistance aims to help ensure that people living in the disaster areas have access to basic medical and social services and resources to rebuild their lives and livelihoods.

In line with the United Nations Resident Coordinator Flood Response Plan, ADB will work closely with the government and coordinate with other development partners to deliver the humanitarian assistance in a manner that minimizes the risk of Covid-19 for affected people in the most severely affected provinces in the central region of Vietnam.

Filed Under: Uncategorized ADB, natural disaster, Covid-19, coronavirus, ncov, pandemic, Vietnam, central region, flooding, support, National Disaster Response Force, Disaster Response Program, State Disaster Response Force, disaster response, natural disaster response, Hands On Disaster Response, disaster response activities, disaster response team, disaster response jobs, disaster response training, disaster response plan, disaster response and recovery

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