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Local
artisans, handicrafts makers, and small village level producers
from 11 of Timor’s 13 districts turned out with their finest
products for the country’s first Christmas Fair, organized
by the Alola Foundation, with support from USAID’s Small
Grants Program and Private Sector Development project. The result
was a mixture of the old—traditional weaving or tais and
miniature sacred house or uma lulik, among others—and the
new--virgin coconut oil, coconut soap, dried fruits, silk items—all
of them products proudly made in “the land of the sleepy
crocodile”.
The Fair attracted a huge number of internationals looking for
unique Christmas gifts especially for their families and friends
back home.
“This is the first market fair I have attended. Our group
was happy to have so many internationals learning about and buying
our products,” said Luisa Dos Santos of Atauro about the
Christmas Fair. Luisa is among a group of women from the off-island
of Atauro who have been making tais-wearing rag-dolls for a few
years now. Her group certainly came home happy from the Christmas
Fair, having sold almost $1,000-worth of dolls at the end of the
day!
The Fair marked Luisa and most of the other producers’
debut as serious vendors. To prepare Luisa and many other small
producers like her for the activity, USAID provided them with
basic business skills training. The day before the big day, USAID
trained the participants on basic business costing and pricing
concepts, and, more importantly, how to communicate and sell their
product to the customer with whom they may not share a common
language. “I found the training very useful. I used what
I learned at the Fair, and now have new skills I can use even
after the Christmas Fair,” Luisa said.
More than an occasion and a marketplace, the Christmas Fair served
as a way of linking rural producers to buyers (the expatriate
market in Dili). The diversity and quality of contemporary Timorese
products on sale made the Christmas Fair a worthwhile experience
for the foreigners. And the vendors earned a total of $9,866 in
sales, allowing them to reinvest in their businesses, in addition
to providing them a much needed extra income during the holiday
season. |
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Luisa
dos Santos (left) and her friends selling tais-wearing
rag-dolls during the Christmas Fair. (Photo by Kate Heuisler/DAI-SGP)
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Colorful
crafts on display during the Christmas Fair. (Photo by
Lendell Foan/DAI-DSP)
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| The
Christmas Fair was their first market fair experience
for most producers; the day before, they received practical
training (including the use of calculator) from USAID.
(Photo by Lendell Foan/DAI-DSP) |
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