Dreams on the Edge of the Clouds: A H’Mông Woman’s Fight for a Future
Minh Viễn wrote this Vietnamese article, published in Luật Khoa Magazine on June 23, 2025.
The cloud-covered highlands of Việt Nam have long been the sacred, self-governing territories of ethnic minorities like the H’Mông. Yet, the tides of the market economy are slowly creeping in, profoundly changing these ancient lands. Amid this transformation, some H’Mông women are daring to take control and reshape their lives.
Along Provincial Road 152 southeast of Sapa, it is a common sight: groups of Western tourists silently trailing a local guide. She might be a young woman in her twenties or a middle-aged woman well-acquainted with the terrain, identifiable as H’Mông by her hand-embroidered “paj ntaub” skirt. She speaks fluent English, guiding guests on treks through the Tả Van villages.
These women have become the new face—the brand—of modern Sapa. Homestay tourism and trekking have opened new income streams and lifted parts of the local community. But behind every smiling guide is often a long, painful journey through poverty and prejudice.
This is the story of Ci (a pseudonym to protect her identity), a young H’Mông woman whose path exemplifies that struggle.
Born a Girl into Poverty, Twice the Hardship
Ci does not remember when exactly she was born. Her ID card lists Jan. 1, 2002, a common placeholder for when the real date is forgotten. Though still in her early twenties, she has been married for six years and has two children. Like her mother before her, Ci married young.
Child marriage remains prevalent among the H’Mông, where a daughter’s fate is often decided by her parents shortly after puberty.
“Girls here rarely went to school,” Ci recalls. “Parents believed education was useless for girls. I had to quit school and get married.” She adds, “I didn’t get to choose who I loved. Back then, we still had the tradition of bride kidnapping—sometimes after one encounter at a festival, they’d take you home as their wife.”
From a young age, Ci heard the same refrain over and over: “Girls can’t do anything.” This deep-seated gender bias trapped women in cycles of arranged marriage, early childbirth, and even abandonment for failing to produce sons. “Some,” Ci says in a whisper, “even turned to poisonous leaves (lá ngón) to escape.”
Haunted by Hunger, Giving Birth Alone
Golden terraced fields are the postcard image of Tả Van’s beauty, but their bounty is short-lived. The single growing season lasts only from May to October, and with scarce land and low yields, the harsh winters are a struggle for survival. In the off-season, many scour the forests for firewood to trade for rice.
In this environment, Ci and her husband lived without electricity or money, often earning their wages in bowls of rice or the occasional chicken. When she was pregnant with her first child, she worked in the fields until the day she went into labor. “I got home with stomach pain and gave birth right there,” she said. “My husband was the only one with me. It was the most painful thing I’ve ever experienced.” A year later, she had her second child—again, without any medical assistance.
A Chance Encounter and the Kindness of Strangers
With two babies to feed and her situation growing unbearable, Ci wandered the roads of Sapa in search of work, often bartering her labor for food. One day, while carrying her child to a hired farming job, she had a chance encounter with a Kinh woman who ran a local homestay. “She brought me home, gave me food and clothes, and asked if I wanted a job,” Ci remembers. “It felt like the first time someone truly cared about me.”
Through her work at the homestay, Ci began interacting with foreign tourists. An American traveler, moved by her story, connected her with Sapa O’Chau, a local organization that teaches English to ethnic minorities. “I only studied for three months, but I felt more confident,” Ci says. “I could share my story with guests.”
Another American visitor once asked Ci what her biggest dream was. Her reply was simple: “Just a bed to sleep on.” The woman visited Ci’s humble home, saw that her "bed" was nothing more than some planks of wood, and vowed to make that small wish come true.
Keeping her promise, the tourist returned to the U.S. and shared Ci’s story, raising funds with her family and friends. They sent Ci a phone and taught her how to use Duolingo and YouTube to continue learning English. Eventually, they raised over $10,000—enough for Ci to build a small homestay. “She gave me 250 million đồng,” Ci shares, “and taught me how to promote tours online.”
Ci’s life changed for the better through simple acts of kindness from strangers.
A Dream for the Future
Today, Ci is a new woman. She confidently leads guests on trekking tours from Sapa to Tả Van, sharing local legends and H’Mông traditions through forests and along steep trails. At her homestay, she not only provides a steady income for her own family but also shelters children from remote areas so they can attend school, teaching them traditional dances to perform for tourists.
“They used to say girls couldn’t do anything,” she says. “But I believe if I succeed, my in-laws and elders will change their minds.” Her own dreams have grown far beyond just having a bed to sleep on. “I want ethnic children here to go to school. I want people to see that girls can do great things too.”
Yet, even as she builds this new life, Ci harbors concerns for the future. The growth of tourism has drawn major investment from Kinh people, whose large hotels and resorts are transforming the landscape. “That used to be such a beautiful hill,” she says about a new development. “Now they’ve torn it all down. I don’t know what to do.”
When asked about competition, Ci says quietly, “I don’t have as much experience as educated people, but foreign guests come to me because they want to understand our traditional culture.”
Her story is not just about a highland girl escaping early marriage to become a homestay owner; it is a testament to the power of unshakable will. Ci began with a simple dream for a decent bed. Now, she offers that very comfort to children in her community, nurturing their own dreams for the future. Her transformation was not a gift from a "more civilized" world, but a harmony of her own extraordinary resilience and the simple compassion of kind, distant strangers.
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Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted on December 7, 2024. The audio recording cannot be published for the interviewee's and reporter's safety. The interviewee's name has also been changed.