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Bridge - Combining the poetic charms of its wild
scenery and the simple daily lives of its people, “Heaven’s Gate”, as
people often call Simacai, is becoming more and more attractive to
travellers.
Si Ma Cai is located in a remote mountain
area of Lao Cai province, at the far end of a road near the border with
China and is inhabited by ethnic people.
Through spectacular mountain
scenery
An old bus, heavily loaded with baggage
and passengers crept slowly along a narrow winding road, with a high
mountain on one side and a deep abyss on the other. Despite the danger
we had to face, the humourous driver told us that it is much easier to
go to Simacai now than before when it took a few days’ ride on horseback
to reach the area.
Our first stop was Quan Than San, a
southern commune of Simacai district, which is 1,600-1,800 metres above
sea level and shrouded in white clouds all year around.
Phin ethnic village is another high point
of the district with plum gardens looking like a water-colour painting.
The village is so charming that our voluntary guide, a border soldier
who has been posted there for nearly ten years, had to exclaim, “Look!
It’s really spectacular!”
Despite its breath-taking scenery and
favourable climate, Simacai is not popular with tourists because of its
difficult terrain, low living standards and poor services. It’s rare
enough to see a foreign tourist riding an old Russian motorbike covered
with red soil and stopping there for a bowl of pho (rice noodle).
The mountain district of Simacai has 13
communes and 90 villages, 80 percent of which are inhabited by the Mong
ethnic people. Most of the people there are living below the poverty
line and need assistance from the government’s programme 135.
Phin village
It took us almost two hours to negotiate
the less-than-10-kilometer bumpy road from the Quan Than San Commune
People’s Committee to the Phin ethnic village. On arriving at Heaven’s
Gate, we had to take a deep breath to summon up courage before
continuing our trip along the one-meter-wide road with a deep abyss on
one side. Ly Seo Phu, a communal cultural official had to do most of the
talking to dispel our fears.
“It used to be very dangerous to go to
the terraced hillside. Thanks to the government’s programme 135, the
roads have been widened for motorbikes and cars, so our village is no
longer isolated,” Phu said cheerfully.
Showing us around the village, elder
Giang Seo Hang, said there are only 13 households living along the three
slopes. “Since the district was rebuilt in 2000, there have been many
non-governmental projects on the go here to help improve the people’s
living conditions,” he said.
Pham Quang Tu, vice director of the
Towards Ethnic Women (TEW) centre, said the centre has been working with
the Simacai District People’s Committee and Phin residents on a number
of projects to gradually improve the living conditions of Quan Than San
residents.
TEW officials often came to live with
local residents and learn about their expectations before deciding to
focus on four major issues related to running water and environmental
sanitation, saving credit and animal husbandry, Vietnamese herbal
medicine development and forest protection, Tu recalled.
In Giang Seo Hang’s house, chairman of
the Quan Than San Commune People’s Committee Ly Xuan Lau proudly said,
“the ethnic people’s lives are changing day by day. Electricity is now
available, all of the 13 families now have pigs, 10 of them have
buffaloes, seven of them have TV sets and all the children go to
school.”
After taking a sip of wine, he added, “We
have even built a cultural house and are now restoring traditional Mong
folk music, musical instruments, and martial arts to be ready to
receive visitors.”
On our way to Pho Lu where we would take a
train to Hanoi, we saw ragged children carrying bundles of firewood on
their backs. A thought crossed our mind that the Phin village still has a
long way to go before beautiful Mong girls have the chance to welcome
tourists with their traditional “sinh tien” dance.
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