Sunday, March 05, 2006

What we owe our children: a post event perspective

At this posting, contributions for the Village School Foundation’s benefit event have surpassed $9,000. It is an extraordinary example of the concern and support of the guests, sponsors and other friends who have helped with this event. Heartwarming to me were all the people involved as volunteers, cooks, supporters, sponsors and participants. All of us at Village School Foundation are very grateful.

The sold out crowd at P.C.C. Rock Creek auditorium enjoyed Vietnamese music, dance and cuisine and viewed a special short documentary film about the foundations efforts and about the plight of young, impoverished children in Viet Nam.


In many rural areas of Viet Nam, there are no schools and so children often do not have an opportunity to go to school even if they want to. $8,000 can build
a brand new grade school, and give dozens of children a chance to do something we take for granted in this country. Come fall, the foundation will have built five schools since 2002, giving hundreds of children a chance to escape hunger, illiteracy and homelessness and enter onto a path of hope and learning.

People always ask questions - questions about why we are doing this; why kids in Viet Nam; why education and not something else – or somewhere else; and why I, an American with a Finnish/Norwegian background, who grew up here in suburban Washington County, care so much for children in Viet Nam.

From my own Buddhist perspective, answering questions like these involves making distinctions – distinctions I do not make. There are no children in Viet Nam, there are just children. For every question why, the smiles on these children’s faces are answer enough. Can the answer I give to your question add any more? Look deeply at the children in the photo to the left. How much is a smile worth? Can you put a price on it? Can you create some logical argument about why it is good?


As far as education, it is a simple matter that all children want to learn. Whether their goal is to support there families or simply learn more about themselves and the world, education gives them a chance to create something out of their life.


All of this is not complex. It is not political. It is very simple. We give of ourselves for the children and families who have a need, families that must endure suffering and dashed hopes every day. As long as this suffering exists, as long as a child works the streets until two in the morning, as long as a child yearns for the simple opportunity to learn, we have to take it upon ourselves to live with compassion, humanity and humility.

We can not solve all of the problems out there – even in the one province we are working in, there is too much to do. But for each smile we create, each dream we help support, we open up innumerable opportunities for a better world. We owe all of our children this much.

We still need ongoing support. Every thirty dollars we raise means one more child can attend school for a whole year. For a tank of gas, or the price of a dinner, or seven lattes, you can give a child what is the dream of many Vietnamese children, the simple opportunity to learn. Multi-year donations can be made by contacting the foundation at www.vsfoundation.com.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

More Photos from the February Event

http://www.vscso.org/VSF_Portland_2006.php

please use this link to see all photos.

Polo from the Asian Reporter

"Well, about one thing we can all agree, and that is our children.
Their need for the best education we can give them."
-- Chi Jones, President
Vietnamese Science and Culture Society of Oregon


On what we can all agree
February's fund-raising concerts for Village School Foundation


By Polo
The Asian Reporter

There are so many issues still unsettled. Exiles are that way. There is a world of deeply held feeling, from dark bitterness to irrepressible hope, about Viet Nam. The nation and the war.
So many things invite angry debate -- the loyalty of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, the lyrics of popular singer Trinh Cong Son, the current intentions of the Socialist Republic's smiling CP leaders. Oregon's vigorous Viet Kieu community is that way. But after passions cool, this immigrant community and their not-so-far away homeland both benefit from each side's struggle to understand their shared and difficult history. And the future looks good again.
"Well, about one thing we can all agree," MC Chi Jones said, deftly handled introductions at the Village School Foundation's benefit concerts last month, "one thing we can all agree on is our children. Their need for the best education we can give them." His audiences, one at South Salem's Westminster Presbyterian Church, the other at Portland Community College's far-west Rock Creek Campus, had to nod, had to smile.

There is also a world of difference between poor rural children in Phan Thiet Province, the focus of Village School Foundation's construction and scholarship efforts, and the tall, polished suburban cul-de-sac kids enrolled in Chi Jones' Vietnamese Science and Culture Society of Oregon's (VSCSO) educational enrichment programs based at the Rock Creek Campus. That painful distinction was lost on no one. Mr. Jones' subtle point was profound. So everyone surrendered to an evening of inspired entertainment.

Inspired music and elegant dance
After an invocation by The Venerable Fa Thai of the Hawthorne District's Miao-Fa Chan Temple, VSCSO students took stage and immediately filled the packed auditorium with traditional Dan Tranh music, with notes of both longing and joy. Elegant young Viet ladies in flowing ao dai danced, elders in their audience dreamed, younger ones were captured inside their lovely moment. Appreciative of the bridge between past and present, home and here, the crowd clapped loud and long.

Nationally acclaimed guitar man and concert story-teller Tinh played next, backed initially by two of Monmouth Taiko's mighty war drums and Village School Foundation trumpeter Dan Enbysk. Tinh then went solo, talking story about what's in his American baby boy's eyes and what flutters around his Phan Thiet pagoda's garden.

Tinh's concerts blend many things. He bends his refined American six-string guitar licks around his stubbornly Viet sensibilities. He loses the distance, in decades and geography, between a lonely monsoon-soaked GI patrolling an Ap-talai rice paddy and our audience of fashionably casual Oregonians soaking up an evening of his acoustic rain. In recognition of his musical originality First Lady Barbara Bush invited Tinh to the White House in 2003.

Village School Foundation
Tinh founded the Village School Foundation in 2002. It is a federally recognized nonprofit charitable organization. The Foundation has since built 3 one-room elementary schools. A volunteer team will be building another this summer in Tinh's ancestral province of Phan Thiet. The cost of labor and materials for a country schoolhouse is approximately 8000 USD. All proceeds from February's benefit banquets and concerts go directly into construction and scholarships. The Foundation welcomes all volunteers, skilled and unskilled, Viet and American, on its trips to Viet Nam.

Coordinating this summer's project are The Foundation's trumpet man, Oregon environmental activist Dan Enbysk, and recent PSU graduate Vy Le, daughter of a nationally prominent painter of the former Republic of South Viet Nam, who settled his family in Portland after the Fall of Saigon.

This season's awareness and fund-raising efforts are coincident with the release of a tribute album for the late great American folk guitar legend, John Fahey. Tinh is a protégé of the Salem musician who passed away in 2001. The tribute album includes Paul Geremia, John Doan, Woody Mann, Terry Robb, and George Winston, among others. All album sale proceeds go to Village School Foundation.

"Helping to insure education in Vietnam seems a fitting and poetic gesture truly blurring the boundaries between philosophy and life," says Tinh of the album and all the efforts associated with Village School Foundation. "Finding inspiration in rediscovering my roots, reconnecting with children in need, and especially remembering John Fahey's music and mentoring, have all come together in this project.

"Putting things right again has become a legacy of this story, and to the children in us all -- the circle comes full round."

At the end of each of February's concerts, lights came on, smiles took the place of tears, audiences spoke softly, left quietly, maybe even drove home a bit more peacefully than the drive there. According to Vietnamese Science and Culture Society of Oregon president Chi Jones, the PCC event alone raised $7000. Enough to raise another small school house. Almost enough to erase a little bitterness.

Bev Silveira, who along with her husband Ben, attended Salem's banquet and concert said "when I look at those children's sweet little faces, the hope there, I know that education is going to help them and their country be a part of the world. Our world."

For more information on the work of the Portland-based, federally recognized non-profit educational organization, Vietnamese Science and Culture Society of Oregon, please see their website:
http://www.vscso.org/

For more information on the work of Village School Foundation, please go to:
http://www.vsfoundation.com/

"when I look at those children's sweet little faces, the hope there,
I know that education is going to help them and their country
be a part of the world. Our world."
Bev Silveira
Salem, Oregon

Friday, March 03, 2006

A Sewing Machine for Huy


This is Huy. Jason, Luke and Tinh met Huy on their trip to Viet Nam last year in Phan Thiet. Huy was run over by a car and because she could not afford medical care, her leg had to be amputated. She lives on the street with her mother and survives by selling government sponsored lottery tickets.

Like many of the kids who do this, she spends most of each day selling tickets - often staying up well past midnight to make around 50 cents, if she's lucky, so she can afford to eat for a day or two. The work is exhausting. When Jason, Luke and Tinh found her, she was sleeping in a little alcove off the street on the ground. Her mom goes around looking for bottles to turn in to raise a bit more money. They do not have a permanent home.


While Huy has a prosthetic for her leg, she doesn't have a wheelchair or even a set of crutches to get around on. Instead, she pushes herself around on a board. Huy says her dream is to go to school and to learn to sew. Of course, purchasing a sewing machine is out of the question for her and her mother. They barely sell enough tickets and collect enough bottles to survive.

Huy, like so many children in Vietnam, have many needs. While the Village School Foundation focuses on providing a stable system of education to kids in the area, there are so many children who have needs that are more basic: eating; clean and safe places to sleep; healthcare. But the dream of going to school is heard over and over again in these children's voices.

Despite her situation, what many of us would call tragic, Huy still has her dream. I have to think that sometimes, a dream and a hope is all these kids have to keep them going as they try to create a better life for themselves and for their families.

I haven't met Huy myself - I hope I'll have that opportunity when I travel to Viet Nam in August. But before that, Tinh is delivering a donated Singer sewing machine to Huy in April.

Thanks to the generous donation of Sandee Enbysk, one of our supporters, Huy will soon have a sewing machine to practice with and we hope to see her sewing beautiful clothes someday soon - supporting herself and her family.

Keep checking this site for updates on ways to donate in-kind equipment, supplies, and services. We need everyone’s help to continue our critical work. Your donation is tax-deductible and it is a simple way to help give hope to these children.

I hope in some small way, this donation of a sewing machine will keep Huy’s dream alive.

Dan Enbysk
Village School Foundation

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Photos From "An Evening in Viet Nam"

Thanks to everyone who showed up at our "Evening in Viet Nam" shows on Friday and Saturday. The event was a success, raising over $7,000 for The Village School Foundation. The organization will use this money towards building another school.