Experiences: Boat People Survivor • Photographer in Refugee Camp

Location: Pulau Galang

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A Brief Biography

My eight-year old son and I were accepted into the Vietnamese Refugee Camp in Pulau Galang, Indonesia 1989. We left the camp in 1993. Life in the camp was quite challenging, due to the fact that there were so many of us but the supply for the necessities of life was really limited. Each week each of us was provided a few kilograms of rice, 9 small herring cans, some cooking oil, Maggie seasoning, soybean sauce, soybean and mung bean; those were all. Anticipating that my son and I would have to stay in this temporary “home” for a while, I purchased a camera, with the money sent to me from my brother in Vietnam, and made my living as a photographer. Every day I took photos from an identification card to different activities that the clients asked me to. These clients wanted to send some pictures to their relatives in America, in Canada, in Australia… or in Vietnam to ensure their loved ones that they were doing well in the Camp. Being a photographer, not only did I want to earn a living, but also desire to record the scenery of the Camp and the memorable activities in this temporary “home”, which would be later preserved as part of the history of the Vietnamese “boat-people”.  As such, after hours of taking photos for clients, I climbed up the hills, spending a lot of time searching for areas where I could take photos of the landscapes of the whole Vietnamese Refugee Camp, from Galang 1, to Galang 2 and Galang 3. In addition, with determination, I was lucky enough to snap photos of certain tragic events taken place within the Camp.

Interview Summary

Photos

"Being a photographer, not only did I want to earn a living, but also desire to record the scenery of the Camp and the memorable activities in this temporary “home”, which would be later preserved as part of the history of the Vietnamese Boat People."

Nguyen Van Tho