Hoan canh vo thi sau biography
Võ Thị Sáu
Vietnamese schoolgirl and revolutionary (–)
In this Vietnamese name, the surname is Võ. In accordance with Vietnamese custom, this person should be referred to by the given name, Sáu.
Võ Thị Sáu ( – 23 January ) was a Vietnamese schoolgirl who fought as a guerrilla against the French occupiers of Vietnam, then part of French Indochina.
Hoan canh vo thi sau biography youtube On June 3, , Ms. She was executed on 23 January Today, she is considered a martyr. A white marble statue of Vo Thi Sau is one of many honoring the sacrifice of women, while numerous photos depict the various roles women undertook in the fighting, from nursing the wounded to armed combat.She was captured, tried, convicted, and executed by the French colonialists in , becoming the first woman to be executed at Côn Sơn Prison. Today she is considered a Vietnamese national martyr and heroine.
Biography
She was born in Phước Thọ Commune, Đất Đỏ District, in At the time, this was part of Bà Rịa Province, but today is a part of Long Đất District, Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu province.
In , she became a contact for a local guerrilla group after many of her friends and family joined the Việt Minh.[1]
When she was 14 she threw a grenade at a group of French soldiers in the crowded market area, killing 1 of them and injuring She escaped undetected. Late in , she threw another grenade at a Vietnamese canton chief — a local man responsible for executing many suspected Việt Minh sympathizers.
Hoan canh vo thi sau biography As the 30 or so local residents who came to clean the graves leave for work, the first mainland visitors arrive in a taxi, unloading their plastic-wrapped offerings for Vo Thi Sau onto a VASCO airlines airport trolley cart for the five-minute walk to her grave. Today she is considered a Vietnamese national martyr and heroine. Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description is different from Wikidata Use dmy dates from May Articles with hCards Commons category link is on Wikidata. Elderly visitors read the inscription on the prisoner-made headstone that once marked Vo Thi Sau's grave.The grenade failed to explode, and she was caught by the French authorities.[2]
Sáu was imprisoned in three different facilities,[2] the last of which was a police post near Côn Sơn Prison in the Côn Đảo Islands. She was executed on 23 January , at the age of 18 by firing squad in the corner of Bagne III; upon being offered a blindfold she refused stating that she wishes to “see her beloved country until the moment of death”.[3][4]
Today, Sáu is considered a nationalist martyr and a symbol of revolutionary spirit.
She is venerated by the Vietnamese people as an ancestral spirit,[5] and has amassed almost a cult-like following of devotees who venerate her grave in Hàng Dương Cemetery on Côn Sơn Island.[3] There is also a temple dedicated to her in her hometown of Đất Đỏ. Many Vietnamese cities and towns also have streets and schools named after her.
See also
References
- ^Eager, Paige Whaley (). From Freedom Fighters to Terrorists: Women and Political Violence. p.
- ^ abGrace, Paul (). "Introduction".Hoan canh vo thi sau biography 2 Vo Thi Sau makes us extremely admire and respectful. The enemy used all kinds of torture to torture her, but she did not yield and did not declare anything. The enemy exiled her to Con Dao. In , she started helping the Viet Minh.
Vietnamese women in society and revolution. Vol.1.
- ^ abEmmons, Ron (). Frommer's Vietnam: with Angkor War.
Hoan canh vo thi sau biography tren: Twelve soldiers were hurt. Mua ngay. Though knowing it was a hard and dangerous task, Sau insisted on carrying out a mission. Growing up in poverty, the daughter of a coachman and a noodle-seller, Sau had to help her parents to earn a living, and blamed the French colonialists for their struggles, particularly after when they stormed her home town of Dat Do Red Land in what is now Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province in the south of Vietnam.
- ^Bass, Thomas (). The Spy Who Loved Us. New York: PublicAffairs. p.
- ^Eisner, Rivka Syd Matova ().Hoan canh vo thi sau biography pdf A former reporter at the now-closed Cambodia Daily , he writes on a wide range of topics from across Asia. She went through three jails and scores of Growing up in poverty, the daughter of a coachman and a noodle-seller, Sau had to help her parents to earn a living, and blamed the French colonialists for their struggles, particularly after when they stormed her home town of Dat Do Red Land in what is now Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province in the south of Vietnam. Between and , an unknown number of tortured prisoners died or were killed by French colonial and, later, American-supported prison staff.
Re-staging revolution and remembering toward change: National Liberation Front women perform prospective memory in Vietnam. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. p.