Boat People
Personal Stories From The Vietnamese Exodus 1975 - 1996
CARINA HOAG
FREMANTLE Pub., Australian Studies
Hardcover, Ed: 01, 2012, 9780987158406
AUD $40.91 ex, AUD $45.00 inc
In stock at: 17 Jun 2013 19:00
The years 1975 to 1996 were witness to the largest mass migration in modern history, with more than a million people leaving their war-torn homeland, Vietnam, in search of safety. Forces migrations are usually fraught with danger and even hazard as the displaced people negotiate mountains, deserts and oceans in all kinds of weather. What was unique about the Vietnam Exodus was that the only route for escape for over a million people was by sea - across open water - and so the only way was by boat. Subsequently this group of refugees has become known the world over as the 'boat people'. Most of the escape boats has been built as river craft plying trade on inland waterways. They were not designed to stand up to the rigours of open-water travel across the South China Sea and often simply fell apart in conditions more challenging than a medium swell. For this reason alone many thousands perished, but others succumbed to starvation, dehydration and cold-blooded attacks by Thai pirates. One in three boat people never completed their journey. Those who did survive it have become a diaspora of Vietnamese people making new lives for themselves in many countries around the world
