When Heaven And Earth Changed Places
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In the book When Heaven and Earth Changed Places by Le Ly Hayslip, Le Ly was just one of many peasants trying to survive during war time. Survival meant having to make some hard decisions; decisions that may make peasants go against their roots. However, as we see Le Ly do throughout the book, peasants do not completely abandon their family traditions. Le Ly was very close to her father and kept everything he taught her in mind while she made some difficult choices. “My father taught me to love god, my family, our traditions, and the people we could not see: our ancestors” (ix). With her fathers help, she was able to honor her past, provide for her familys needs, and give her son a chance for a better future. If Le Ly was unable to adequately provide for her family, she felt she let her father and ancestors down.
Le Ly never forgot about honoring the past while trying to better conditions for her future generations. Le Lys father had a big influence in her life. Her father had once told her “Right is the goodness you carry in your heart–love for your ancestors and your baby and your family and for everything that lives. Wrong is anything that comes between you and that love” (201). After her father died, she realized just how connected the past is with the future and was determined to please her fathers spirit in everything she did. Le Ly always listened for her fathers spirit calling out to her; to his little peach blossom. Because of her father, she knew that she could, and should, go to America with her son for a better life. Once in America, Le Ly knew she could not sever her roots from the home she loved, as long as she was called to help her struggling home country. When she returned to Vietnam to see her family again, she saw the need for help and knew she was called back home for a reason. Once again she heard her father, this time welcoming her home. “Bay Ly, Bay Ly–my little peach blossom–why have you been gone so long” (315)? Her family was depending on Le Ly to bridge the gap between Vietnam and America to bring help to the peasants. “In the name of my father and all the other victims of war, I founded an agency in 1987 to help my brothers and sisters in Vietnam while helping my brothers and sisters in the United States come back from their wartime experiences” (367). The means of survival were not looked down on so much as a disgrace, but as young woman trying to do the best she can to keep her and her family alive.
Le Ly thought about the welfare of her family when she was going from job to job. At one point, Le Ly had to support two households on a black-market salary. “With the expense of two households and less money from my sales, I could see the day would come when we would all be back out on the street. I determined I would do anything before I let that happen again” (256). This forced Le Ly to take drastic measures she vowed she never would take again. When Big Mike offered four hundred dollars to Le Ly to have sex with two GIs, she at first refused. However, with the money she would be able to take care of her family for a year. “Four hundred dollars would support my mother, me and Hung for over a year…” (258). Selling ones body was not looked highly upon. Le Ly, remembering what her father taught her, decided she must do this for the family. “He taught me that to sacrifice ones self for freedom… was a very high honor” (ix). She was able to give in to Big Mike knowing that this money was going to help her and her familys financial situation. This money