A true fisher of men on the
Sai Gon River
Some people have a job, others have a calling. Nguyen Van Chuc has a
calling.
When
the 60-year-old fisherman from HCM City’s Binh Thanh District isn’t working
by transporting goods and passengers he fishes out drowning and dead people
from the Sai Gon River, a river he lives on in a boat.
When
he was eight years old, Chuc followed his father rowing up the Sai Gon River
to catch fish. On one occasion, someone hired his father to search the river
for a missing relative.
He
was so scared when he saw his first dead body that he pretended to be ill so
his father could not ask him to go the next time. However, after learning how
meaningful the work was, he has never dodged and gradually grew accustomed to
it.
“It’s
God’s will that right after I got married, my wife and I decided to settle
under the Binh Loi Bridge. Many people come here to commit suicide due to
problems like broken hearts and financial struggles,” Chuc recalled.
Nguyen
Thi Hinh, Chuc’s wife, said she was nervous the first time she saw a person
jump into the river to attempt suicide. Seeing her husband row towards the
victim and save him gave her great joy.
Now
Hinh often goes with her husband to fish out the dieing and the dead.
“I
can perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation better than my husband,” she said
proudly.
“Whether
it’s day or night, sunshine or rain, whenever we hear the splash of something
falling into the river, we quickly start the engine and rush off to save
them,” Chuc was quoted by Vietnam Television as saying.
If
the victim was unconscious, he would perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation to
save him. If there was no sign of life, he would inform police.
They
also take rotting bodies floating down the river ashore without hesitation.
Chuc
said that helping the dead find a grave to rest in is the right thing, adding
that many Vietnamese shy away from taking dead body into their boats for fear
of bad luck.
“I’m
Catholic. I’m not superstitious. However, my family usually gets bigger
harvests, even twice or triple the amounts we catch normally after we have
taken many dead bodies out of the river, ” he said.
As
many as 300 people have been rescued by the couple over the past forty years.
But one incident from nine years ago is seared into Chuc’s memory.
“Someone
called me when they saw a body floating down the river. However, after
pulling it closer, we saw a child tied with a rope to the body of a woman. I
could not help but cry for the little child,” he said.
“This
was the first time he cried and cried for a long time. Even though we have
rescued hundreds of people, he didn’t shed any tears even when his father
died,” Hinh said.
Life
has never been easy for the couple.
Because
they were so poor, all of their five daughters had to drop out of school in
the ninth grade.
As
they live on a boat, the couple have to tie their feet to their children at
night, lest they hall into the river while they sleep.
In
the past, Chuc’s family made their living on fishing on the river but now due
to water pollution, fish are scare. He survived on money earned from
transporting goods and passengers along the river.
Some
of those Chuc saved come back to visit him, encouraging him to keep going
with his work. Recently, on the occasion of Lunar New Year Festival, a
pregnant woman, who was rescued by Chuc, took her son to his house. A boy who
attempted to commit suicide even invited Chuc to visit him in Hanoi to
express his gratitude to him.
In
recognition of his good deeds, local authorities have granted him
certificates of merit and provided some financial support.
When
asked what he wants most out of life, Chuc said he hoped to have a piece of
land where he could build a house and live in peace, making a living selling
lottery tickets.
But
he admitted there’s a long way to go for his dream to become true.
VNS
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Chủ Nhật, 1 tháng 4, 2018
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