The Star Malaysia - Star2

Proud to don the blue beret

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WHEN they agreed to join the UN Peacekeepi­ng mission in South Sudan, 73 Vietnamese officers knew they would have to leave behind their families to travel to the war-ravaged country. The 10 female officers on the mission, which will leave Vietnam later this month, play an especially critical role, as Muslims in South Sudan strongly prefer to be treated by doctors of the same gender.

But because the female officers also shoulder duties as wives and mothers in their homes, answering the call of internatio­nal duty to provide healthcare for South Sudanese women required weighing the potential effects on their families in Vietnam.

Four years ago, Major Bui Thi Xoa did not find the decision to become a “blue helmet” nurse an easy one. She spent a lot of time deliberati­ng whether to go on a year-long mission in a foreign country, as her teenage son is in his formative years and she wanted to be with him to take care of him and give him guidance.

Her sympatheti­c husband, also a military officer, encouraged her to join the mission. Finally, Xoa decided to put country and service first, in line with the duties of a soldier.

Born in 1975, Xoa is one of the earliest and oldest members of the field hospital level 2 No.1 mission to South Sudan.

Years after the first day of training, Xoa still vividly recalls the initial struggles.

“My biggest limitation was foreign language fluency, especially in my pronunciat­ion, so I needed to put in extra effort to catch up with other staff at the hospitals,” she said.

“At this age, it's not easy to learn another language, and then with so many examinatio­ns in quick succession, I felt like I was haunted by the English language, which wouldn't let loose its grip even in my dreams,” Xoa said with a laugh.

In the first year of training, she travelled nearly 60km each day, back and forth from her home in Bien Hoa City of Dong Nai Province to the Military Hospital 175 based in Ho Chih Minh (HCM) City.

The long commute, coupled with the intense and extensive training schedule left her no time to take care of her family. Her absence “turned it upside down,” as in Vietnam most home matters are undertaken by women, even though women’s rate of participat­ion in the workforce is one of the highest in the world.

The situation became untenable and eventually her family decided to move to HCM City.

“In the beginning, my son seemed unable to adapt to the new environmen­t, his new school, and I was really worried, but now, things have settled and I can now go on with my mission,” Major Xoa said.

Senior Lieutenant Pham Thi Thu Trang, the maternity nurse for the field hospital, had a much harder decision to make.

Long before she departed for South Sudan, her four years of training in HCM City required her to entrust her nine-year-old daughter to her parents in the central province of Quang Binh.

“Sometimes, after a day of uninterrup­ted exercise in the scorching heat, I missed my daughter so much I could barely sleep, but I told myself to soldier on,” Trang said.

Luckily, her daughter was not causing much trouble for her octogenari­an grandparen­ts.

“Without my parents’ support, I

don’t think I could make it,” Trang said.

Major General Nguyen Hong Son, Director of the Military Hospital 175, said that originally, there were only five female officers in the South Sudan mission. But to meet the demands for medical care not only of the UN Peacekeepi­ng mission, but also for the local people, who are mostly Muslim, the UN sought more female officers in the field hospital to treat women. “Of the 10 female officers in this mission, four are married and have young children, but they have sacrificed all that to serve their duties, this deserves the highest respect," Son said.

All members of the mission struggled with the difficult conditions in the field.

For Junior Lieutenant Phan Thi Van Huyen, the physically taxing hours of intense training in 38°C weather were the most memorable challenge.

Huyen, together with two other new members, began training a little over a year ago, so she had to play catch-up with the other mission members who had started preparing years earlier.

Besides the intensifie­d exercises for the newcomers to quickly catch up with the more senior members, Huyen felt the need to improve her stamina by running and going to the gym outside of official training hours in anticipati­on of the heat, literally and figurative­ly, in the African deserts.

“Profuse sweating today means less bloodshed tomorrow” is a frequent joke and a motivation­al slogan shared among the hospital's medical officers.

“I couldn't believe that I would one day hold a gun, let alone fire it, so I trembled terribly at first, but now I actually aced the tests,” Van Huyen said with a wide smile.

Cultural ambassador­s

Aside from their profession­al role, the officers of the South Sudan mission also act as ambassador­s of Vietnamese culture to an internatio­nal audience.

“It's not just medical expertise or survival skills that are required, the medical officers are also versed in folk tunes and traditiona­l dances, as well as Vietnamese dishes,” said Director Son.

The luggage of Vietnamese female medical officers to South Sudan contains several colourful ao dai, the traditiona­l long dress, andao tu than, the four-piece top, with patterns of recognisab­le Vietnamese features such as the bronze drums and lotus.

Practising traditiona­l Vietnamese dishes was an enjoyable part of the female officers' experience before leaving South Sudan.

Senior Lieutenant Pham Thi Thu Trang meanwhile picked up the title of the fastest and most skilled in wrapping the traditiona­l chung cake.

“We will be having our Lunar New Year celebratio­n in Africa, so I want to excel in making this particular cake, both to help alleviate my team's homesickne­ss, and to introduce it to friends from other countries,” Thu Trang said.

“To stand amongst the UN Peacekeepi­ng force is a proud milestone. There are challenges ahead, but I'd consider the trip an achievemen­t thanks to the continued efforts by all members of the team for the last three to four years,” Thu Trang said.

Hoai Thu, a medical profession­al and long-time admirer of the peacekeepi­ng soldiers before she became one herself, said, “I am proud to wear this blue beret, a symbol of peace, and cannot wait for the day to raise the Vietnamese flag of red and yellow stars in South Sudan.” – Viet Nam News/ Asia News Network

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Medic take p
 ?? — ANN ?? al officer Nguyen Xuan Khu is part of the first Vietnamese delegation to art in the UN peacekeepi­ng mission in South Sudan.
— ANN al officer Nguyen Xuan Khu is part of the first Vietnamese delegation to art in the UN peacekeepi­ng mission in South Sudan.

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