linton: asare also sells his newly imported items to other retailers in kantamanto market. ike chaos, but there's a method to this madness. these retailers are picking the finest clothes that have come in from the bale in order to be ready for market day. linton: asare lives a few hours from the city center. in a good year importers can turn over $140,000. asare: so the money i get i don't drop off, i just save some. so i just save it. linton: asare asamoah attributes his family's success to divine intervention. asare: and god has blessed what i'm doing. and god grace living in this house. it's very big conflict between sunday and my job. the cloth that i sell, that one is somebody culture, like a white man used to wear it when going to office, but this one is our own culture. linton: today is sunday, and in this deeply religious country it's a day for traditional clothing. western castoffs are so cheap that local textile makers can't compete. since the 1980s, their output has fallen by as much as 75%. ♪ hallelujah. ♪ ♪ the lord is here. ♪ linton: traditional african clothin