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i spent a winter "service" term in northern
viet nam with warren
wilson college. the group was hosted by the ymca of viet nam, a christian organization in a majority buddhist country. we spent a week or so assisting in the building of a elementary school in a small village outside phong. the educational components were a little lacking as we were supposed to be studying the economic, social, and psychological effects of the "
american war" on the people but it being a communist country (government suppression) it felt much more like a tour of
disneyland. it seemed to be more of a sightseeing vacation. we were hustled from one westernized attraction to next n
restaurant by our
ymca hosts. nevertheless i have never felt as genuinely welcomed or interested in as by the people of
viet nam, i know it sounds cliche but i was amazed.
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the crew in front of a museum dedicated to the viet namese struggle for independence
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street barbershop: notice the barbers mask; many viet namese wear masks outside for one reason or another (pollution i suppose)
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typical view of the countryside outside of thanh hai; where we did our service project
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mixing concrete with the women
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the girls painting doors for the school
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can you find the professor in this picture? dr. kusujiarti with the ladies
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the local men would sit all day in the child size chairs and watch us. one day roasted corn was brought by a family for a snack. notice the pith helmet, a remnant of french rule. although the men sat, the women would work alongside us, in fact the hired laborers were some of the hardest working women i had ever seen. dressed in nice clothes, the typical conical hat, and a mask the women were strangely mysterious.
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thanh hai pagoda in the village's center
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wowing the children with my high school skills
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lunchtime break in thanh hai in the village center playing soccer with the kids
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at the dedication ceremony for the school
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two worlds collide; in sapa in the northern highlands, native hmong women and some of the girls in the group. sapa has turned into a tourist town for buying hmong goods and jump-off town for trekking through mountains
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the group hiking in the northern highlands among the terraced rice fields
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for a nation to have survived so many atrocities at the hands of
americans and in one generations time seem to forgive their antagonists is beyond me. before leaving i thought about what the peoples reactions would be like and i almost welcomed some hostility, i felt that if someone would yell at me i would take it as an apology for my country but
surprisingly i never encountered the least bit of harassment.
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