Võ Thị Sáu

Võ Thị Sáu
Born 1933
Phước Thọ, Đất Đỏ, Vietnam
Died March 13, 1952(1952-03-13) (aged 19)
Côn Sơn Prison, Côn Sơn Island, Vietnam
Nationality Vietnamese
Occupation Nationalist guerilla, schoolgirl
Years active 1948-1952
Known for Martyrdom

Võ Thị Sáu (Đất Đỏ, 1933 – March 13, 1952) was a Vietnamese schoolgirl who fought as a guerilla against the French occupiers of Vietnam. She was captured, tried, convicted and executed by the French colonialists in 1952, becoming the first woman to be executed at Côn Sơn Prison. Today she is considered a Vietnamese national martyr and heroine.

She was born Phước Thọ Commune, Đất Đỏ District in 1933. At the time, this was part of Bà Rịa Province, but today is a part of Long Đất District, Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu Province. In 1948, she became a contact for a local guerilla group after many of her friends and family joined the Viet Minh.[1]

When she was 14 she threw a grenade at a group of French soldiers in the crowded market area, killing of them and injuring 12. She escaped undetected. Late in 1949, she threw another grenade at a Vietnamese canton chief a local man responsible executing many suspected Viet Minh sympathizers. The grenade failed to explode, and she was caught by the French authorities.[2]

Sáu was imprisoned in three different facilities,[2] the last of which was Côn Sơn Prison in the Côn Đảo Islands. She was executed on March 13, 1952, at the age of 19.[3]

Today, Sáu is considered a nationalist martyr and a symbol of revolutionary spirit. She is venerated by the Vietnamese people as an ancestral spirit,[4] and has amassed almost a cult-like following of devotees who venerate her grave in Hàng Dương Cemetery on Côn Sơn Island.[3]


References

  1. 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 national liberation cause. 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....
  2. 1 2 Grace, Paul (1974). "Introduction". Vietnamese women in society and revolution. Volume 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 market place. 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....
  3. 1 2 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 ....
  4. 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 (liet si) Vo Thi Sau. She is one of the most revered ancestral spirits in the lives of the performance group women. Vo Thi Sau ...
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