Armless little girl, grandma happy together in Ho Chi
Minh City
Tran Thi Lang and her
armless granddaughter, Vo Ngoc An, are seen peddling lottery tickets in
downtown Ho Chi Minh City.Tuoi Tre
Despite financial
difficulties and disability, an armless little girl and her grandmother
peddle lottery tickets in downtown Ho Chi Minh City and find solace in each
other.
Over the
past year, residents in the vicinity of Ben Thanh Market, one of Ho Chi Minh
City’s icons in the downtown area, have grown used to the sight of Tran Thi
Lang, a 52-year-old lottery ticket peddler who invariably takes along her
6-year-old granddaughter Vo Ngoc An.
The duo have
been together since An was born.
On an
average working day, the small-statured woman roams the street, deferentially
asking potential clients to buy her tickets.
An also lent
her grandma a hand by holding the stack of lottery tickets with her chin and
eagerly trying to talk passers-by or diners into buying their tickets.
Though many
shake their heads, the young girl is rarely discouraged.
An has no
arms, with a finger-shaped stub sticking to one shoulder.
Her luminous eyes and chubby face offset a hunched gait caused by spine
curvature.
Lang
revealed that she sells around 150 tickets each day, and the grandmother and
granddaughter return to their rented room on the city’s outskirts by noon,
otherwise An will suffer.
“I feel uneasy
leaving An in the rented room alone. Late last year, she had bouts of fatigue
and much difficulty breathing.”
The little
girl was later diagnosed with spine curvature which resulted in a bent spine
that exerts excessive pressure on her heart.
The doctor
suggested a bone-arranging surgery to treat her condition, but Lang cannot
afford the costly operation for the young girl.
At noon,
when the pair run out of tickets, Lang takes her granddaughter to a bus
station and catches a bus back to their rented room in Binh Chanh District.
At the end
of an arduous working session, An’s smiles rarely fade from her face.
Back in
their rented room, the limbless child flops onto the floor, gripping a glass
with one leg and pressing on a spout with the other to get herself a glass of
water.
After
gulping down the glass content, she gets another glass and gives it to her
paternal grandmother.
Apart from
being armless, An was also delivered prematurely and weighed merely 1.7
kilograms at birth.
The devoted grandmother and her ‘penguin’ grandchild are pictured
inside their rented room. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Her parents
were too poor to take care of her.
Her paternal
grandmother has tended to her since.
The twosome
left their hometown in the Mekong Delta province of Bac Lieu for Ho Chi Minh
City with hopes of eking out a better living.
“I can’t
remember how many hospitalizations An has gone through. I’m worried sick when
rushing her to hospital at night sometimes,” she said.
The
middle-aged woman spends VND700,000 (US$31) each month on the rent of a 12m²
poorly equipped room, located far away from Ben Thanh Market, where she and
An peddle tickets for a living. She cannot read or write and struggles hard
to pay the rent and buy milk for An, as the ailing child eats very little.
An has been
denied education though she is now old enough to enter the first grade.
Despite
being illiterate, the little girl is bright and infatuated with painting with
her two legs.
She shared
she has dreamed of becoming an artist.
An proudly
showed some of her coloring notebooks containing childish items, drawn by her
legs and suggestive of her artistic taste.
Lang gets up
at 4:00 am every day to get ready for a day’s work.
She then
wakes An up, wrapping the drowsy child snuggly with a towel and carrying her
along by putting the towel over her neck.
“Now that
she weighs 20 kilograms, I cannot carry her on foot for half an hour to the
bus station. The towel does the job quite well,” she explained.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Chủ Nhật, 27 tháng 3, 2016
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