Vietnam. Mekong River. 2017. Ha Thi Be, 67, poses for a portrait with the two young grandsons who lived with her in this ancestral home, Ha Duy Phuc, 11, and Ha Trung Kien, 4. The children have rar
(...) ely visited the ruins of their home after it collapsed into the Tien River (a major branch of the Mekong River) in late January (2017), taking most of the family's furniture and possessions into the water. Madam Ha Thi Be ran a little coffee stall out front. Madam Ha Thi Be said, looking emotional as she stood in the ruins of the only house she has called her own. " We are lucky it happened in the afternoon. If it had happened in the night while we three were asleep, we would have died, " Madam Ha Thi Be said, looking emotional as she stood in the ruins of the only house she has called her own. "My son never let me visit the ruins of the house afterwards... he was afraid that the house would collapse on me." "I'm very sad to lose the ancestral riverfront house where I grew up. That's why I stayed until the very end. It took all of what we owned to build the house, and how it's all gone." "I love the river. It was so close to our lives. When I was a child, we'd catch fish, snails to eat. When the sand dredges came, the fish and snails are no more. They keep taking the sand, causing the land to erode. My house collapsed because the dredgers kept taking sand. We all dislike them but the government approved them so there's nothing we can do about it. I don't know what they use the sand for. I just heard that they take the sand to Saigon to build houses." Location: Phu Thuan B Commune, Hong Ngu district, Dong Thap province.