Núi Cô Tiên ở Nha Trang bốc cháy, giải cứu thành công 25 người cắm trại
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Listening to the story of a woman in Khanh Hoa who is doing strange work every day on the hillside makes everyone shudder and haunt. However, the reason behind it is an example that not everyone is brave enough to follow.
According to information from Vietnamnet, Ms. Pham Thi Kim Loi (39 years old, Vinh Ngoc commune, Ho Chi Minh City) Nha Trang, Khanh Hoa), affectionately known as Be Be, has been working for nearly 20 years in grave management at a children's cemetery located in Vinh Ngoc commune, Nha Trang city (Khanh Hoa province). Her house leans back against the mountain, and looking up from her house, she can see a large cemetery with colorful graves built evenly.
Loi calls it Rose Manor, where more than 14,000 bodies of unborn babies are buried. More strangely, all the babies who stayed in this manor were hand-picked by her to be buried from hospitals, clinics ...
Ms. Loi said that the name of the rose symbolizes love, whether the fetus is discarded or damaged, it is also the crystallization of parental love. Each grave will be placed with a flower branch depending on the paint color of the cluster, making the cemetery look like a flower garden. The feeling of desolation doesn't seem to be here.
The rose manor is located on land owned by Loi's family. This is also the will of her grandfather, who dedicated a large plot of land as a burial place for the ill-fated fetus and infant.
It is known that at the time, her grandfather was very fond of children. He gave birth to 18 children, some of whom were lost at a very young age. Later, he decided to dedicate a large area of land on the mountainside to serve as a burial place for infants, fetuses who were not destined for their parents.
After his death, none of his descendants were fortunate enough to carry on the work. Later, Loi found herself "charmed" enough to carry on his will. Because, since she was a girl, she followed her grandfather to receive the fetal body for burial.
Since being given a small plot of land at the foot of the mountain by her grandfather, Loi has built a house to live in and spends her daily time managing and caring for the graves at this manor. For the rest of the time, if there is information about the fetus or infant abandoned at the clinics or hospitals concerned, she will go there to collect their bodies and take them to her manor.
At this manor, Loi performs necessary tasks before burying the children, including bathing and impregnation. For unborn babies that parents have acknowledged or infants whose families cannot care for and have died after birth, she will persuade their parents to build their own graves to honor and remember their children.
In 2004, she officially took over the manor, volunteering to receive the bodies of fetuses and newborns for burial. She said: "The first purpose of the manor is to help unborn babies in hospitals, clinics ... have a resting place. Later, the manor received burials, making free graves for the bodies of fetuses and newborns discovered by the people. I love them equally so there is no way that one child's grave is big, beautiful while the others are smaller, uglier... Currently, the manor has more than 14,000 graves. And I all recognize the children in the manor as children, proclaiming their mother," the woman confided on Vietnamnet.
After spending her youth at the manor, Loi met and fell in love with her current husband. However, her future husband's family did not like her to continue her work. Her future mother-in-law had a spiritual worry that if she did this job, her and her son's paths would be difficult.
In the end, however, both families respected her and her husband's decision and accepted them as husband and wife. While living together, Loi's husband was very supportive of his wife's work and decided to join her in the work she has been doing for nearly 20 years.
Not only that, but her husband sacrificed a lot for her. He took care of all the financial aspects of the family and took care of the children himself, to give her enough time to continue his important work, which was to receive the bodies of the fetuses from the manor and take care of them.
One day in 6/2014, despite being pregnant, Ms. Loi was still eager to carry the fetal body to the mountain for burial.
"That morning I took 4 bodies to the grave. Because he had to go up the high stone steps, help take the lake for him, when he went down, there was blood. At the time of being admitted to the hospital, the husband did not have time to sign the papers, his daughter was removed at the age of 7 months and 4 days. Born prematurely, but heaven forbid, healthy babies weigh up to 3.3 kg. I like girls very much, every time I go to the cemetery, I vow to them that if they are girls, they will enter the womb. I've been given by heaven now," she smiled again.
According to Loi, at the manor, the number of aborted fetuses is much more than the number of babies lost after birth. Of the more than 14,000 graves, only about 200 are burial places for babies who died after birth. Much of the rest is a burial place for aborted fetuses.
Vụ 12 học sinh ngộ độc ở Nha Trang: đã xác định được tác nhân gây hại Phong Trần16:30:30 15/04/2024Cơ quan chức năng tỉnh Khánh Hòa không lấy được mẫu thức ăn bán ở đường phố mà các em học sinh đã dùng bữa để xét nghiệm, nên không xác định được thức ăn nguyên nhân .
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