VietNamNet Bridge – Hundreds of students in the border district of Muong Lat
in Thanh Hoa province, have to walk dozens of kilometers of forest road to reach
their schools. After the school hours they stay in the short-lived cottages.
Rice, salt and forest vegetables are the main kinds of food in their meals.

The poor students only have frugal meals...
Most of the students of the Muong Ly Secondary School have to travel tens of
kilometers of forest roads to reach to their school. Since their houses are too
far from school, Mong minority children have to go to the forest to chop down
trees, stretch canvas tents along the streams or rivers on the Ma river’s
upstream, where they stay and learn every day.
Giang A Sau, 8th grader of the Muong Ly Secondary School, related that his
parents are living far in the Suoi Uon mountain village, 17 kilometers far from
the school. Sau was brought by his parents to the school on the first day of the
new academic year. They went to the forest to cut off bamboo branches to install
a cottage. This is the place where Sau will stay and study for the whole
academic year.
Sau is now living together with two friends, Mua A Chech and Giang A Dung, who
are both 9th graders. The things that the three boys bring with themselves to
school are just several books, old clothes and thin blankets. The children
cannot sleep on sedge mats, but on the cottage’s floor made of the bamboo
sticks.
The poor students only have frugal meals which include rice, forest bamboo
sprouts, unripe bananas, and while salt. The lunch of the students here was so
simple. “We are lucky today because we have got bamboo sprouts. We always only
have rice and salt,” said Giang A Sau.
The boy said that many of his classmates come from Sai Khao, Trung Tien and Xi
Lo villages, which are 15-20 kilometers far from the school. The students have
to go back to their home at the end of weeks in order to bring rice to the
cottages, which will be used on the days they stay there to study. The “well
off” parents can give their children 10,000 or 20,000 dong, so that the children
can purchase some dried fish for their meals. Meanwhile, poorer parents cannot
provide enough rice to their children, and the children sometimes have to go to
school with empty stomach.
“We never have breakfast. We just dream of having enough rice for lunches and
dinners,” Sau said.
If the students have free time, they would go to the forest to pick up forecast
vegetables, get bamboo sprouts or look for ant-eggs for food.
The national electricity grid has not reached out to the remote area, while they
do not have money to buy candles or kerosene for paraffin lamps; therefore, the
students have to complete reviewing the lessons before it gets dark.
“We have to struggle to live and study. But we try to go to classes every day.
We hope that the literacy would help us get good jobs and escape from poverty in
the future,” Sau said.
Tran Van Hao, former Headmaster of the Muong Ly Secondary School, who spent 15
years on teaching students in the mountainous district, said that the life here
is so hard for teachers as well.
“Vegetables prove to be the luxurious thing in the mountainous area, while pork
and beef are just the dream,” Hao said. Every time when Hao and other teachers
returned from the trips to the home villages in the lowland, they had to bring
toothpaste, shampoo, candles and dried fish, the things which cannot found in
the remote area.
Source: VnExpress
