Võ Thị Sáu
Võ Thị Sáu | |
---|---|
![]() Portrait of Võ Thị Sáu at the Vung Tau Police Office. | |
Born | 1933 Phước Thọ, Đất Đỏ, French Indochina |
Died | 23 January 1952 | (aged 18–19)
Cause of death | Execution by firing squad |
Nationality | Vietnamese |
Occupation(s) | Nationalist guerrilla, schoolgirl |
Years active | 1948–1952 |
Known for | Anti-French guerilla combat, political martyrdom |
Võ Thị Sáu (1933 – 23 January 1952) was a teenager who fought as a guerrilla during the First Indochina War participating in the resistance movement against the French colonists for Vietnam’s independence. She carried out multiple assassination attempts targeting French officers and Pro-French Vietnamese individuals collaborating with the colonial government in Southern Vietnam at the time. She was captured, tried, convicted, and executed by the French in 1952, becoming the first woman to be executed at Côn Đảo Prison.
Today in Vietnam she is considered a symbolic national revolutionary martyr and heroine. The Vietnamese government posthumously awarded her the title of Hero of the People's Armed Forces in 1993.[1][2]
Early Life
Võ Thị Sáu was born in 1933 to Võ Văn Hợi and Nguyễn Thị Đậu. Her birthplace was in Phước Thọ Commune, Đất Đỏ District, Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu province. She was born into a poor family. Her father worked as a horse-cart driver transporting passengers between Long Điền and Phước Hải, while her mother sold bún bì chả (a type of noodle dish) at Đất Đỏ Market. As a child, she had to work early to help her parents earn a living and survive. At the age of four, her family rented a house in a row of market buildings constructed by the village. (This house, now located in Đất Đỏ Town, has since been restored by the Vietnamese government as a memorial site.)[3]
Joining the Resistance Movement
After the French reoccupied Đất Đỏ in late 1945, Võ Thị Sáu’s older brothers, friends, and relatives left home to join the Việt Minh resistance movement fighting for Vietnamese Independence. She abandoned her studies to help her parents while secretly providing supplies to her brothers, who were part of the Liberation Army of Bà Rịa Province.[4]
In 1946, she followed her brother Võ Văn Me into the resistance and became a courier and saboteur for the local Đất Đỏ Guerrilla Force. She personally participated in multiple grenade attacks against French forces.
In 1947, at just 14 years old, she officially became a member of the Đất Đỏ Guerrilla Force. From that point onward, she took part in several grenade attacks and assassinations of French officers and Pro-French Vietnamese collaborators, gaining the admiration and support of the local population. On July 14, 1949, during a French National Day celebration Bastille Day in Đất Đỏ, she was given a grenade with which she managed to kill a French captain and wound 12 other French soldiers, where she escaped undetected.
Capture and Death Sentence
In December 1949, at the Tết Canh Dần (Lunar New Year) market. A Vietnamese Pro-French collaborator, a canton chief of the district, who was known to have managed to get hundreds of young Vietnamese men suspected of being Viet Minh cadres a part of the independence movement executed by reporting to the French. Upon being spotted right in the marketplace, Sau was given the responsibility by her comrades of eliminating the traitor. Since they were low on ammunition, she was given only one hand grenade. It did not explode and she was caught by the French authorities.[5][6]
After her capture, she was interrogated and imprisoned in Đất Đỏ, Bà Rịa Prison, and later transported to Chí Hòa Prison. In April 1950, a French military tribunal tried her for killing one French officer and 23 Vietnamese individuals who had collaborated with the French. At the time of her trial, she was still under 18 years old, and her defence lawyers argued this as grounds to avoid a death sentence. However, the French military court still sentenced her to execution. This ruling caused widespread outrage, sparking protests both in Vietnam and France. Due to the public backlash, the French authorities delayed carrying out the sentence. She remained imprisoned in Chí Hòa Prison until mid-January 1952, when she was secretly transferred to the Infamous Island of Côn Đảo where she was sent to Côn Đảo Prison a prison built by the French to jail those considered especially dangerous to the French colonial government, she was sentenced to death just upon turning 19.
At dawn on January 23, 1952, around 5 AM, she was taken to the warden’s office near Banh I courtyard for a religious ritual. At 7 AM, she was led to Banh III courtyard, where she was executed by firing squad. Her body was buried at Hàng Dương Cemetery in a pre-dug grave.
In the “Death Monitoring Book (1947–1954)” preserved in Côn Đảo, an entry written in French states: “Le 23 Janvier 1952: 195 G.267 Võ Thị Sáu dite CAM mort 23/1/1952 7h P.Condor Par balles…” (January 23, 1952: Prisoner G.267 Võ Thị Sáu, known as CAM, executed at 7 AM at Poulo Condor (Con Son) by gunfire).[7][8]
Moments before execution, she refused to be blindfolded.
”There’s no need to blindfold me. Let my eyes gaze upon my beloved homeland one last time to the final second. So I can look straight into the barrels of your guns!”
Legacy
After her execution, North Vietnam recognised Võ Thị Sáu as a revolutionary martyr. In 1993, she was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the People's Armed Forces.
In 1995, Hồ Chí Minh City Television produced the film Như một huyền thoại (Like a Legend), depicting her life.
Her grave at Hàng Dương Cemetery on Côn Đảo has been restored multiple times and is now a famous pilgrimage site. Due to numerous legends of her spirit appearing, her memorial site is frequently filled with offerings. A special midnight ritual at her grave, attended by many visitors, has become a well-known tradition.
The house her family rented in the late 1930s and early 1940s was purchased by the Vietnamese government in the early 1980s, restored to its original state, and designated as a national historical site under Decision No. 15/QĐ-BT on January 27, 1986.
Today, Sáu is considered a nationalist martyr and a symbol of revolutionary spirit. She is venerated by the Vietnamese people as an ancestral spirit,[9] and has amassed almost a cult-like following of devotees who venerate her grave in Hàng Dương Cemetery on Côn Sơn Island. Her name has been given to numerous streets in cities across Vietnam, as well as many schools across the country, including an elementary school in Cuba.[10]. At the beginning of 2021, Hồ Chí Minh City merged Wards 6, 7, and 8 of District 3 into a single ward, which was named Võ Thị Sáu Ward.[11] There is also a temple dedicated to her in her hometown of Đất Đỏ.[12]
Her image has been immortalized in the 1958 song Biết ơn chị Võ Thị Sáu (Grateful for Sister Võ Thị Sáu) by composer Nguyễn Đức Toàn.
The 1996 film Người con gái đất đỏ (The Girl from the Red Land), based on her life, featured singer Thanh Thúy portraying Võ Thị Sáu. She was widely praised for her performance, which was considered a successful portrayal of the historical figure.
Famous Quotes of Võ Thị Sáu.
“Loving one’s country and resisting colonial invaders is not a crime.”
“I still have a few trash cans in Chí Hòa Prison. Go ahead and confiscate them!”
”I only know how to stand. I do not kneel.”
“I am not guilty.”
“My only regret is not being able to eliminate all the colonial invaders and their treacherous lackeys.”
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/55/Vo_Thi_Sau_grave_01.jpg/150px-Vo_Thi_Sau_grave_01.jpg)
See also
References
- ^ "Sâu nặng nghĩa tình ngày về nguồn". Báo Công an Nhân dân điện tử (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "Anh hùng lực lượng vũ trang nhân dân Võ Thị Sáu". baria-vungtau.dcs.vn. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "CONG AN BRVT-vi nuoc quen than- vi dan phuc vu - Phong trào an ninh tổ quốc". web.archive.org. 17 November 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Eager, Paige Whaley (2008). From Freedom Fighters to Terrorists: Women and Political Violence. p. 131.
One story in particular of Vo Thi Sau exemplifies the commitment of the women to the cause of national liberation. In 1948, after many of her friends and relatives joined the Resistance against the French, Sau became a courier and saboteur for a local guerrilla group....
- ^ Grace, Paul (1974). "Introduction". Vietnamese women in society and revolution. Vol. 1.
On March 13, 1952 the French executed a sixteen-year-old woman named Vo Thi Sau. She was being ... She was given a grenade with which she managed to kill a French captain and wound 12 French soldiers. Her action went undetected. Late in 1949, a Vietnamese collaborator who was the canton chief of the district managed to get the French to execute hundreds of young men suspected of being Viet Minh cadres right in the marketplace. Sau was given the responsibility of eliminating this traitor. Since ammunition was so scarce, she was given only one hand grenade. It did not explode and she was caught by the French authorities. She went through three jails and scores of....
- ^ "Đó là hành động xúc phạm người anh hùng - Tuần Báo Văn Nghệ TP.HCM". web.archive.org. 15 May 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Trí, Dân (27 July 2017). "Hé lộ những giây phút cuối đời của nữ anh hùng huyền thoại Võ Thị Sáu". Báo điện tử Dân Trí (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ News, V. T. C. (19 October 2012). "Vì sao có ngày Phụ nữ Việt Nam?". Báo điện tử VTC News (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.
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has generic name (help) - ^ Eisner, Rivka Syd Matova (2008). Re-staging revolution and remembering toward change: National Liberation Front women perform prospective memory in Vietnam. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. p. 287.
The Spirit of Vo Thi Sau – One of the other spirits lingering and listening in the room with us is that of the national martyr (let si) Vo Thi Sau. She is one of the most revered ancestral spirits in the lives of the performance group women. Vo Thi Sau ...
- ^ "Gifts presented to Vietnamese-named Cuban schools". Vietnam+ (VietnamPlus) (in Vietnamese). 15 March 2022. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ Emmons, Ron (2012). Frommer's Vietnam: with Angkor War.
Perhaps the most tragically poignant story of Con Son's prisoners is that of Vo Thi Sau, executed by the French at 19 years of age for lobbing a grenade at French soldiers when she was only 14. These days there is something of a cult ....
- ^ "Võ Thị Sáu - Nữ đội viên công an xung phong sống mãi với quê hương". Báo điện tử An ninh Thủ đô (in Vietnamese). 9 March 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2025.
- ^ "Cuộc đời và sự nghiệp kháng chiến của Võ Thị Sáu, nữ anh hùng miền đất đỏ". VOH (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 11 February 2025.