Thank you for being born into this world
Ueno Miyuki at her Merci
SaiGon shop at Osaka
Ekimae Building.
Tuoi
Tre
In Japan, not many people could
share the same feeling with me over General Giap’s death. I have read an
article about the great general titled “Gen. Giap and two loves of his life”
which is really touching. He is not only an
outstanding military genius but also a friendly and simple person.
That is the reason which makes many Vietnamese generations love and admire
him since the war ended. He will still live in our heart.
I have acknowledged that Vietnam has
been holding a memorial service and burial ceremony for General Giap on
October 12 and 13. I wish I could go there to pay tribute to him and thank
him for being born into this world. But instead, I would stay home and wish
him to rest in peace as I am unable to attend the tribute-paying ceremony.
Last but not least, I wish that Vietnam could
become a developed country and Vietnamese people could live peacefully as
General Giap hoped. My respect to General Giap is the reason why I visited Dien Bien Phu, the site of his great victory,
in autumn 2009. Ueno Miyuki”
Maybe I was a Vietnamese once
We met Miyuki in Osaka in April 2011. At that time, Japan was seriously damaged by the triple
disaster including earthquake, tsunami and the Fukushima nuclear plant crisis. The
country’s people overcame all of the pain
through their outstanding courage.
Miyuki has traveled through a lot of
countries including Cuba, Korea, Malaysia,
Singapore, Cambodia, Portugal,
Dominica, Mexico, US, France
and New Zealand.
She often tells people that she is a Vietnamese.
After learning Vietnamese at Japan’s Osaka
University, Miyuki spent
approximately three years living in Vietnam. She used to study at the
Ho Chi Minh City University of Social Sciences and Humanities (USSH) and work
at a Binh Duong-based Japanese company. Miyuki is good at speaking Vietnamese
and can distinguish the difference among word nuances from various Vietnamese
regions.
Miyuki lives at Osaka and opens a shop named Merci SaiGon
which sells Vietnamese souvenirs. She also has a part-time job which supports
Japanese children, of Vietnamese origin, at the Sonoda Kita elementary
school.
Miyuki’s special point is her strong
affection for Vietnam.
She told me “Maybe my parents or I used to be a Vietnamese” when we were
waiting for the subway. She sets her mobile phone language to Vietnamese. Her
keychain has the hammer and sickle symbol. Her email address has her
Vietnamese name “My Hanh”.
At Merci Saigon, we saw a small
Vietnamese flag and two pictures of Uncle Ho. Miyuki told me many times that
she loves Vietnam,
Uncle Ho and General Giap and that she is Uncle Ho’s next generation.
DUONG THANH TRUYEN, TUOI TRE
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