Thirty-six-year-old Pham Thi Hau was born in a poor village in Hai Duong province. After losing her father at a young age, she had to move to Hanoi when she was 10 years old to earn money to go to school. At the age of 24, she got married and had a daughter. Not long after, her husband, and Ms. Hau was left to raise her daughter alone.
Today, she sells toothpicks for the Hanoi Disabled People Association to earn her living. Ms. Hau has to walk more than 20 kilometres each day to sell toothpicks and spends a lot of her time working to ensure her family’s standard of living, minimal though it is. As a result, she has very little time for her 12-year-old daughter. However, Ms. Hau is still always working to better her daughter’s life, even though there are so many obstacles in her own.
GAP worked with CARE International in Vietnam to implement the Personal Advancement & Career Enhancement (P.A.C.E) initiative from 2005-2015. The initiative helps female factory workers reach their full potential through the development of professional, life and interpersonal skills. The two-phase program involves a series of factory-based learning modules, covering areas from personal finance and communications to health and gender equity. These created opportunities for the women to move into management or supervisory roles at factories and better lead in their families and communities.