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Metalsmith with spoons


1975, Laos. A visitor from neighboring Houaphan Province teaches the first Naphia villager to cast spoons from aluminum bomb and other Secret War scrap metal littered throughout the countryside.


Cluster bombs cased in aluminum


The most heavily bombed country per capita, between 1964 and 1973, the US dropped 2 million tons of ordnance on Lao PDR, averaging one B-52 bomb load every 8 minutes, 24/7, for 9 years.


Expert clearance of unexploded ordnance (UXO) from farmland


One of the poorest countries in SE Asia, 80% of the population relies on subsistence agriculture. Bringing another meaning to farm to table, families eat most of what they harvest, leaving little left to sell.

Two metalsmiths that engineered the challenging bracelet molds


ARTICLE 22 works with the Rural Income through Sustainable Energy (RISE) Project of Swiss NGO, Helvetas, and artisans in three rural villages to develop design-forward products like the peaceBOMB bracelet. The approach is to cultivate sustainable economic development, protect culture by capacity-building upon pre-existing skills and use local resources.

Children of metalsmiths with scrap aluminum; baby wearing a small ring the parents made into a bracelet


With meager disposable income, handcrafts play a vital role in the livelihoods of rural and urban families.

The first villager to learn how to repurpose bomb metal in 1975 and his son who has continued the trade


The objective of the peaceBOMB Project is to help support income generating activities and the creation of sustainable businesses so that the next generation can build upon the foundation set by their parents.

The Rural Income through Sustainable Energy Project has helped the community implement sustainable energy


Benefits from the sale of peaceBOMB bracelets are shared across the community through donations to a village micro-credit fund that provides small business and other loans to members as well as supports community infrastructure projects.

Another remnant of war, villager unknowingly wears US ARMY jacket


Money from a second fund will be allocated for other village needs such as education. We are currently assessing village needs to ensure funds have as positive and lasting an impact as possible.

Wood and ash molds in front of an earthen kiln


Today, villagers continue to take a constructive approach to the destruction of war by recovering their livelihoods through available local resources, creating molds from wood and ash, kilns from the earth, spoons and now bracelets from aluminum war scrap metal.


Rocket mortar among other debris


The implicit dangers in the process of scrap metal collection have led the RISE Project and ARTICLE 22 to research the supply chain from production back to collection. We are working to make it safer by collaborating with expert organizations pursuing professional UXO extraction and providing risk education to scrap collectors and safety techniques to artisans.

Part of war machinery


Repurposed metal includes the stabilization fins of cluster bomb casings, flares, certain fuses and parts of fighter jets. Local demand for this metal has existed since the 1970s, creating the strongly-entrenched scrap metal supply chain that exists today.

Trademark TM article 22 & Article 22 trading Co.

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