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Cheap Chinese imports threaten Vietnamese businesses selling traditional festival masks

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Vu Thi Thoan's family has been making papier mache masks, part of traditional Vietnamese celebrations for the mid-autumn festival, for over four decades. But cheap Chinese toys are threatening her business. Photo: AFP

Vu Thi Thoan’s family has been making papier mache masks, part of traditional Vietnamese celebrations for the mid-autumn festival, for over four decades. But cheap Chinese toys are threatening her business.

The mid-autumn festival, which falls on Sunday with the full moon, is Vietnam’s equivalent of a harvest festival.

It is typically marked by the gifting and consumption of moon-cakes - dense, sweet delicacies - the performance of colourful lion dances, and the giving of presents, including traditional masks, to children.

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Large papier mache lion head masks are used in the lion dances, and smaller versions, depicting characters such as Ong Dia, a folk spirit, are given to children to play with around the time of the festivities.

“My family has made masks for over 40 years,” said Thoan, 55, who lives in a village in Hung Yen province, where once, nearly all local families used to make masks.

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Now, just three mask-making families remain.

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