Gretta in Vietnam

I am an Advocacy Project Peace Fellow spending the summer in Dong Hoi City, Vietnam. I will be working with Survivor Corps' partner organization LSN-V. LSN-V works with landmine survivors providing peer support, building capacity and advocating for human rights. I will be posting thoughts, pictures, ideas and ramblings on here. Please comment and respond if you are inspired to do so!
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Heading Home

Sadly yesterday was my last day at LSN-V.  I really can’t believe it since it feels like I just got here.  Over the past ten weeks I have been privileged to work with the dedicated and creative staff here in Dong Hoi.  Special thanks to everyone for making me feel so welcome and at home: to my trusty translators and partners in crime Kim Hoa and Giang, to Chi Hong and Chi Dung for their guidance, to all the Outreach Workers who made time in their busy schedules to tour around Quang Binh and introduce me to survivors, and to Anh Luong for keeping us all safe on the chaotic highways of Vietnam.  LSN-V is a well-oiled machine and I hope that I was able to contribute to their mission during my short stint here.  I am also thankful for everyone who made this experience possible with their support, encouragement and feedback–it would not have been possible without you all.

For those of you who have enjoyed my posts I hope that you’ll check out LSN-V’s brand spankin’ new Tumblr blog: (http://lsnv.tumblr.com/).  They will be posting more survivor stories and videos on there, so please continue to keep abreast of all the amazing work these folks are doing day in and day out.

To leave off I’d like to introduce you to another survivor.  All the survivors I have met over the past few months have left an imprint on me that I won’t try to sum up.  I have been humbled many times over by their generosity and optimism.  To them I am indebted.

08/15/2009 22:34
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Despite the intense midday heat and our very late arrival, Mr. Vo Minh Quang was a fountain of energy when we finally showed up at his home in Nam Trac commune. Luckily for me, his is a contagious energy. I had been doing interviews since the early hours of the morning and didn’t know if I was up for another one but Quang’s enthusiasm and good mood quickly transformed mine. I soon realized that this trait explains a lot about his character.

Mr. Quang has been active in his community for over twenty years. After the war ended and Quang finished secondary school he got a job with the local authority as a guard. At that time he was also appointed Secretary of the Commune Cooperative (later becoming the Secretary of the Commune Youth Union). Mass organizations like the Cooperative and the Youth Union operate in every commune. They make up Vietnam’s civil society and are run on a voluntary basis. Quang has been involved with them at one level or another since the war and believes community service has been essential to his spiritual recovery.

Quang’s father died when he was a young boy and even though he was just a child, Quang was left with the responsibility of helping his family. Near the end of the war, as Quang was on his way to collect wood from the forest a bomb exploded in his path. He recalls that the sky was dark and filled with clouds that day, a detail he remembers because he never saw the plane that dropped the bomb and by the time he heard its engines above, it was too late. He lost his left leg and spent 6 months in the hospital. He was 10 years old at the time.

But Quang is quick to emphasize the support he received from his family and the community. They gave him notebooks so he could continue with school and offered spiritual advice. He says that because he was very young when he was injured that he labored at improving himself and recovering. As a result, Quang has become a sort of super-survivor: one that has much to teach but simply leads by example.

Twelve years ago Quang was elected Village Head–no small accomplishment given the stature of the position and the all too common stigma against persons with disabilities in Vietnam.  Quang remained in that position for 10 years, plugging away at improving his community without ever getting compensated for his work.**  This kind of commitment to service is not only admirable, it’s rare.

Given Quang’s obvious belief in the importance of civil society, he was disappointed that there was no mass organization for persons with disabilities in Vietnam.  Needless to say when LSN-V opened up in 2003, Quang was elated and got involved immediately.  Since then he has seen the positive effects on survivors be they spiritual, physical or financial.  Quang himself has benefited, receiving a cow through LSN-V’s Direct Assistance program.  Financially, things have been hard for Quang’s family and the cow has been a great help in increasing his income.

But despite any challenges he has faced, Quang’s character is defined by service to others, by the perspective that: Not everyone has been as lucky as me, I need to give something back.

And that pretty much says it all.

**Side Note: It was not Quang who mentioned that he was not paid for his work.  I naively asked Giang (my coworker and translator) if that job paid well and she explained to me that these positions are strictly voluntary.

08/15/2009 22:32
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08/14/2009 02:59
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LSN-V’s Outreach Workers are the lifeblood of the organization.  Without them the unique model of social empowerment and peer support would not be possible.  I have been impressed by everyone I have worked with here, but I have been most inspired by the Outreach Workers’ commitment to survivorship.  Though they come by it naturally—they are all survivors themselves—their dedication and energy is invaluable to creating sustainable social change.  Deciding who to profile was tough, but I decided to interview Mr. Thuan.  I made this decision in part because I have spent most of my time in the field with him, but mostly because when he tells jokes he waits with eager anticipation while they are translated and then laughs again once I’ve heard the punch line in English.  It’s pretty great.

08/12/2009 04:37
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Healthy Mind, Healthy Body

I have written quite a bit about how inclusive and sustainable employment is an important element of recovery.  It is undoubtedly the most discussed topic amongst the survivors I have met, but Economic Opportunity is only one portion of LSN-V’s work.  LSN-V’s two other programs focus on Health Services and Social Empowerment.  Health care and rehabilitation services are imperative part of recovery, and it is often an ongoing process that requires attention repeatedly over a lifetime.  A few weeks ago I met with Mr. Ho Nooc, a survivor and self-help group leader who discussed some of the health needs, both physical and psychological, he and other survivors face in Vietnam.

Mr. Ho Nooc
Mr. Ho Nooc

Shortly after we arrived at his home just outside of Dong Hoi proper, Mr. Nooc pulled out his x-rays to show us where the pins had been inserted into his leg after he broke it almost two years ago.  It was immediately apparent that the screws were not put in properly, they were angled and unevenly spaced.  The failure of the first operation left Ho Nooc unable to work and with little mobility.  He has since had another surgery to remove the pins and set the leg properly–a procedure made possible in part by a Direct Assistance Grant from LSN-V.  He shows us the “after” x-ray and it bears little resemblance to the first, the leg has almost no  signs of the injury.  Hopefully, if Ho Nooc continues to heal he will be able to return to work soon.  Though this recent bout of health troubles are telling of the recurrent issues survivors face, Ho Nooc’s story of recovery began much earlier.

During the Tet Holiday in 1973, when Ho Nooc was 17, a bomb exploded on the street in front of him.  The physical injuries were substantial: he lost his right hand and sustained other wounds, but in the aftermath of the accident it was the psychological trauma that proved to be a greater challenge for him to overcome.  For years, Ho Nooc felt severely depressed; he thought he had lost everything, that the future held nothing for him.  It took him many years to reverse this downward spiral; but by his account, about seven years after the accident he resolved to “live like a human, not to have a meaningless life.”  Though he does not really know what prompted his transformation, with this new-found resolve Ho Nooc traveled up shore to work at a fishery.  Once gainfully employed, his confidence grew; he met his (now) wife and began to think about marriage, something he previously thought was not in the cards for him.  Ho Nooc finally saw his potential.  And with a healthy mind and positive outlook Ho Nooc began to live as a survivor.

Recovery, however, is not always a perfectly upward trajectory.  When Ho Nooc broke his leg he was discouraged, especially because he was not able to work and lost his independence, circumstances that were reminiscent of 35 years earlier when he was first injured.  But Ho Nooc’s relationship with the other survivors he works with and mentors as the head of the Self-help Group motivated him to stay positive.

When asked about his position as the Self-help Group leader, Ho Nooc’s enthusiasm is palpable.  He talks energetically about feeling truly challenged and rewarded by his work, about how he has expanded his knowledge through trainings and improved his business skills as a result of the networking he has had to do.  When asked what advice he gives to survivors who are struggling, Ho Nooc looks a little dumbfounded that I don’t already know the answer.  He says he simply encourages them to continue to attend group meetings and to participate in the big events, especially on April 18 (Vietnamese National Day for Persons with Disabilities) and December 3 (International Day for Persons with Disabilities) because once they are a part of the community, survivors do not face their challenges alone.  So even if a survivor has financial difficulties or physical problems, say they break a leg, the group helps that individual to find a solution.  Peer support really is that simple…or genius, depending on how you look at it.

Ho Nooc talks about the road to recovery.
Ho Nooc talks about the road to recovery.
08/10/2009 21:44
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Last Friday I went to visit Mr. Dung’s vocational training center for persons with disabilities in Dong Son commune.  With the support of LSN-V, Dung began offering training in incense making, silk-screening and candle making for his fellow survivors this past April.  His is a great story of leadership and initiative—I put together the video above in an effort to help him share it.

To see pictures of the Training Center click on the link to Flickr.

And a special thanks to my coworker Meg for letting me steal her computer for hours at a time to edit my video!

08/04/2009 01:17
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All of the survivors I have met with since being in Vietnam have touched on the need for sustainable and inclusive employment.  One of the primary programmatic elements of LSN-V and Survivor Corps’ work is Economic Opportunity for survivors.  Over the past few weeks I met with some of the business groups operating in Quang Binh province.  The video above explains more about the awesome work these groups are doing and the substantial impact they are having on the lives of survivors and their communities as a whole.

**Please note: The video quality diminished quite a bit when I posted this on YouTube.  I am trying to resolve this issue and will hopefully have a higher-quality version soon.  Thanks for your patience.

07/29/2009 06:35
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