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“Bringing love to the children of war” – Excerpts from Why Do You Look at Me and See a Girl?
With Mother’s Day this weekend, we look beyond the flowers and platitudes to a celebration of fierce motherhood, embodied in the grandmother of writer Anvi Hoàng and recounted in her book, Why Do You Look at Me and See a Girl? (Guernica Editions). Hoàng’s grandmother Cam escorted her three children – including her mother, Cúc – over 250 miles of hostile jungle and amid the 1949 conflict in Vietnam to reunite with her grandfather. We share an excerpt from the book, as well as the author’s thoughts on motherhood, in honour of moms everywhere.
An introduction from Anvi Hoàng
Excerpts from Why Do You Look at Me and See a Girl?
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…“Grandma, why did you let my mom, uncle Tuấn and aunt Hương go far away for high school while local schools were just as adequate?” I asked. We were picking chayote in the garden. These thin-skinned beauties hanging above my head in the vines are as big as an adult’s hand. They love the cool weather of Đà Lạt so much they grow almost like weeds there. Their light green flesh bulges up and shines through. Fresh chayote, sliced paper thin you can see through when held up against the sun, stir-fried with only garlic and fish sauce, is good enough to bring back all the sweetest memories. Chayote cubed and simmered in a broth of carrot and fatty pork shoulder wins over the most difficult Vietnamese eaters. No Vietnamese I know can refuse this kind of slow-cooked soup. I folded my arm close to my side and began to stack the chayote lengthwise. The scent of freshness filled the air. Even the soil in grandma’s garden smelled fresh. Mixing all that into my mom-and-aunt Hương-and-uncle Tuấn’s-away-from-home high school journeys, I had an intoxicating cocktail.“Don’t you remember the saying?” Grandma’s voice disrupted my daydreaming. “Travel broadens the mind. I also believe that one has a right to knowledge and a right to live their life as they wish. With knowledge and understanding people tend to be less mean and cruel. Life will be pleasant for us all.”“During the war when aunt Hương, uncles Tuấn and Hùng were in jail for their antiwar activities, how often were you allowed to visit them?” I asked, thinking about how distraught and miserable she was, and how she could easily have become in such a situation a whining, helpless, depressed and neglected wife and mother. Then the lone journeys she made on the road from the furthest southern corner of the land, Côn Đảo island, up to the northern edge of South Vietnam in Quảng Trị province, bringing love to the children of war. “I was so worried then, my heart ached all the time,” grandma said. “But to be their faithful supporter is the best I could do. They were adults, made their own decisions in life and had to follow them through. I believed that their strength, the same one they used to pursue their ideals and passions, would help them triumph over their own ordeals to reach the destination of their choice, whatever it was. Around once a month, I am allowed to see them. It took weeks to move from one place to another.” Grandma’s face lifted and her eyes aimed at the dangling chayote right above us. Grabbing a big one by the bottom, she twisted it around its stem. After three rounds the stem began to thread away and readied to sever from the vine. One last gentle twist and the lime green beauty nestled coolly in grandma’s palm.“And grandma, how come you never interfered in their love life? You never told them to date or not to date someone?” Grandma looked right into my eyes. Her lips slowly broke into a smile.“Well, I believe in freedom in love. Don’t you, con?”Survival is doing the best expecting the worst.Inspiration is aiming for the best.And so the stories of my grandma unfold.* * *
Anvi Hoàng grew up in Vietnam and taught English as a Second Language for six years before coming to the U.S. for graduate studies. In 2015 she co-founded, and as Chief of Operations has since managed, the Vietnamese American Society for Creative Arts and Music (VASCAM). Why Do You Look at Me and See a Girl? (Guernica Editions) is her debut book. She lives in Bloomington, Indiana, with her husband, composer P.Q. Phan.