Floating community grounded by poverty
THUA THIEN
One such group
living on the edge of society in
Ngoc Anh is not
alone. Her two older brothers are in a similar, if not worse situation - Hung
aged 11 and Tuong aged 13. The children started going to school late because
they had no birth certificates - and because of their parents' floating life.
But the biggest fear is that their studies may end sooner than later because
of a lack of funds.
Tuong, Hung and
Ngoc Anh only received their birth certificates in July 15 this year. The documents
carry the surname of their mother, Vo Thi Tranh, because their father, Le Van
Ai, has no ID card.
Ai knows he is
from a boat family living on water in
Ai restarted his
floating life on a small boat donated by other boat residents on the
In
Recently the city
carried out programmes to resettle the families and educate their children.
Authorities have now banned floating communities within the city boundaries
to improve the city's image and to provide better security.
However, the
resettlement excluded Ai, his wife and family as Ai officially does not
exist. This pushed them even further down the social and poverty ladder and
meant no education for the children.
Ai sailed his boat
household about 4km to the lower reaches of the
However, the
resettlement policies of the commune once again excluded Ai and Tranh family.
The couple and their growing family of four children are still floating
around with little hope for the future. "I did not think of sending the
kids to school because we could only afford one meal a day," said Tranh.
"Why on earth go to school anyway?".
Every day, Ai
catches fish in the river while Tranh and the children collect waste bottles
to sell. The boat is too small for six to sleep on regularly, so Ai has built
a hut from scrap material on the river bank in Phu Mau for all to sleep in.
"If there's no rain, the children sleep on the boat. When it does rain,
we all share the cottage, but we often get totally wet," said Tranh.
From 2009 to 2012,
many freelance photographers in
But the family was
till locked into its life of poverty and illiteracy because of the lack of ID
cards. Ai found that his fish catches were not enough to feed a family of
six. "We have only one meal a day," he said, gulping down pieces of
donated mooncake.
However, there is
a light at the end of the dismal tunnel. The Helping Hands group is
collecting money to build a small house for the family. Tranh said she
planned to sell goods if and when the dwelling eventuates, given that local
authorities will not provide any land for it.
Thanks to the
financial and material support from the group, Tranh has filed for birth
certificates for her children in Kim Long Ward, where Tranh was born. The
money has also been sufficient to send Tuong, Hung and Ngoc Anh to school. A
brighter future potentially awaits them, particularly Ngoc Anh, the smartest
of the three. "Going to school is really fun. I have many new
friends," she said.
But there is no
guarantee that the group's budget will be sufficient to cover all academic
expenses - even for the next academic year, according to Lan. The educational
bridge could collapse, leaving the children stranded in their world of
poverty. - VNS
by Phuoc Buu
|
Thứ Ba, 17 tháng 9, 2013
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