

If Lia Lee had been born in the highlands of
northwest Laos, where her parents and twelve of her brothers and sisters were born, her
mother would have squatted on the floor of the house that her father had built from
ax-hewn planks thatched with bamboo and grass. The floor was dirt, but it was clean. Her
mother, Foua, sprinkled it regularly with water to keep the dust down and swept it every
morning and evening with a broom she had made of grass and bark. She used a bamboo
dustpan, which she had also made herself, to collect the feces of the children who were
too young to defecate outside, and emptied its contents in the forest. Even if Foua had
been a less fastidious housekeeper, her newborn babies wouldn't have gotten dirty, since
she never let them actually touch the floor. She remains proud to this day that she
delivered each of them into her own hands, reaching between her legs to ease out the head
and then letting the rest of the body slip out onto her bent forearms. No birth attendant
was present, though if her throat became dry during labor, her husband, Nao Kao, was
permitted to bring her a cup of hot water, as long as he averted his eyes from her body.
Because Foua believed that moaning or screaming would thwart the birth, she labored in
silence, with the exception of an occasional prayer to her ancestors. She was so quiet
that although most of her babies were born at night, her older children slept undisturbed
on a communal bamboo pallet a few feet away, and woke only when they heard the cry of
their new brother or sister. After each birth, Nao Kao cut the umbilical cord with heated
scissors and tied it with string. Then Foua washed the baby with water she had carried
from the stream, usually in the early phases of labor, in a wooden and bamboo pack-barrel
strapped to her back.
Foua conceived, carried, and bore all her
children with ease, but had there been any problems, she would have had recourse to a
variety of remedies that were commonly used by the Hmong, the hilltribe to which her
family belonged. If a Hmong couple failed to produce children, they could call in a txiv
neeb, a shaman who was believed to have the ability to enter a trance, summon a posse
of helpful familiars, ride a winged horse over the twelve mountains between the earth and
the sky, cross an ocean inhabited by dragons, and (starting with bribes of food and money
and, if necessary, working up to a necromantic sword) negotiate for his patients' health
with the spirits who lived in the realm of the unseen. A txiv neeb might be able to
cure infertility by asking the couple to sacrifice a dog, a cat, a chicken, or a sheep.
After the animal's throat was cut, the txiv neeb would string a rope bridge from
the doorpost to the marriage bed, over which the soul of the couple's future baby, which
had been detained by a malevolent spirit called a dab, could now freely travel to
earth. One could also take certain precautions to avoid becoming infertile in the first
place. For example, no Hmong woman of childbearing age would ever think of setting foot
inside a cave, because a particularly unpleasant kind of dab sometimes lived there
who liked to eat flesh and drink blood and could make his victim sterile by having sexual
intercourse with her.
Once a Hmong woman became pregnant, she could
ensure the health of her child by paying close attention to her food cravings. If she
craved ginger and failed to eat it, her child would be born with an extra finger or toe.
If she craved chicken flesh and did not eat it, her child would have a blemish near its
ear. If she craved eggs and did not eat them, her child would have a lumpy head. When a
Hmong woman felt the first pangs of labor, she would hurry home from the rice or opium
fields, where she had continued to work throughout her pregnancy. It was important to
reach her own house, or at least the house of one of her husband's cousins, because if she
gave birth anywhere else a dab might injure her. A long or arduous labor could be
eased by drinking the water in which a key had been boiled, in order to unlock the birth
canal; by having her family array bowls of sacred water around the room and chant prayers
over them; or, if the difficulty stemmed from having treated an elder member of the family
with insufficient respect, by washing the offended relative's fingertips and apologizing
like crazy until the relative finally said, "I forgive you."
Soon after the birth, while the mother and baby
were still lying together next to the fire pit, the father dug a hole at least two feet
deep in the dirt floor and buried the placenta. If it was a girl, her placenta was buried
under her parents' bed; if it was a boy, his placenta was buried in a place of greater
honor, near the base of the house's central wooden pillar, in which a male spirit, a
domestic guardian who held up the roof of the house and watched over its residents, made
his home. The placenta was always buried with the smooth side, the side that had faced the
fetus inside the womb, turned upward, since if it was upside down, the baby might vomit
after nursing. If the baby's face erupted in spots, that meant the placenta was being
attacked by ants underground, and boiling water was poured into the burial hole as an
insecticide. In the Hmong language, the word for placenta means "jacket." It is
considered one's first and finest garment. When a Hmong dies, his or her soul must travel
back from place to place, retracing the path of its life geography, until it reaches the
burial place of its placental jacket, and puts it on. Only after the soul is properly
dressed in the clothing in which it was born can it continue its dangerous journey, past
murderous dabs and giant poisonous caterpillars, around man-eating rocks and
impassable oceans, to the place beyond the sky where it is reunited with its ancestors and
from which it will someday be sent to be reborn as the soul of a new baby. If the soul
cannot find its jacket, it is condemned to an eternity of wandering, naked and alone.
Because the Lees are among the 150,000 Hmong who
have fled Laos since their country fell to communist forces in 1975, they do not know if
their house is still standing, or if the five male and seven female placentas that Nao Kao
buried under the dirt floor are still there. They believe that half of the placentas have
already been put to their final use, since four of their sons and two of their daughters
died of various causes before the Lees came to the United States. The Lees believe that
someday the souls of most of the rest of their family will have a long way to travel,
since they will have to retrace their steps from Merced, California, where the family has
spent fifteen of its seventeen years in this country; to Portland, Oregon, where they
lived before Merced; to Honolulu, Hawaii, where their airplane from Thailand first landed;
to two Thai refugee camps; and finally back to their home village in Laos.
The Lees' thirteenth child, Mai, was born in a
refugee camp in Thailand. Her placenta was buried under their hut. Their fourteenth child,
Lia, was born in the Merced Community Medical Center, a modern public hospital that serves
an agricultural county in California's Central Valley, where many Hmong refugees have
resettled. Lia's placenta was incinerated. Some Hmong women have asked the doctors at
MCMC, as the hospital is commonly called, if they could take their babies' placentas home.
Several of the doctors have acquiesced, packing the placentas in plastic bags or take-out
containers from the hospital cafeteria; most have refused, in some cases because they have
assumed that the women planned to eat the placentas, and have found that idea disgusting,
and in some cases because they have feared the possible spread of hepatitis B, which is
carried by at least fifteen percent of the Hmong refugees in the United States. Foua never
thought to ask, since she speaks no English, and when she delivered Lia, no one present
spoke Hmong. In any case, the Lees' apartment had a wooden floor covered with wall-to-wall
carpeting, so burying the placenta would have been a difficult proposition.
When Lia was born, at 7:09 p.m. on July 19, 1982,
Foua was lying on her back on a steel table, her body covered with sterile drapes, her
genital area painted with a brown Betadine solution, with a high-wattage lamp trained on
her perineum. There were no family members in the room. Gary Thueson, a family practice
resident who did the delivery, noted in the chart that in order to speed the labor, he had
artificially ruptured Foua's amniotic sac by poking it with a foot-long plastic
"amni-hook"; that no anesthesia was used; that no episiotomy, an incision to
enlarge the vaginal opening, was necessary; and that after the birth, Foua received a
standard intravenous dose of Pitocin to constrict her uterus. Dr. Thueson also noted that
Lia was a "healthy infant" whose weight, 8 pounds 7 ounces, and condition were
"appropriate for gestational age" (an estimate he based on observation alone,
since Foua had received no prenatal care, was not certain how long she had been pregnant,
and could not have told Dr. Thueson even if she had known). Foua thinks that Lia was her
largest baby, although she isn't sure, since none of her thirteen elder children were
weighed at birth. Lia's Apgar scores, an assessment of a newborn infant's heart rate,
respiration, muscle tone, color, and reflexes, were good: one minute after her birth she
scored 7 on a scale of 10, and four minutes later she scored 9. When she was six minutes
old, her color was described as "pink" and her activity as "crying."
Lia was shown briefly to her mother. Then she was placed in a steel and Plexiglas warmer,
where a nurse fastened a plastic identification band around her wrist and recorded her
footprints by inking the soles of her feet with a stamp pad and pressing them against a
Newborn Identification form. After that, Lia was removed to the central nursery, where she
received an injection of Vitamin K in one of her thighs to prevent hemorrhagic disease;
was treated with two drops of silver nitrate solution in each eye, to prevent an infection
from gonococcal bacteria; and was bathed with Safeguard soap.
Foua's own date of birth was recorded on Lia's
Delivery Room Record as October 6, 1944. In fact, she has no idea when she was born, and
on various other occasions during the next several years she would inform MCMC personnel,
through English-speaking relatives such as the nephew's wife who had helped her check into
the hospital for Lia's delivery, that her date of birth was October 6, 1942, or, more
frequently, October 6, 1926. Not a single admitting clerk ever appears to have questioned
the latter date, though it would imply that Foua gave birth to Lia at the age of 55. Foua
is quite sure, however, that October is correct, since she was told by her parents that
she was born during the season in which the opium fields are weeded for the second time
and the harvested rice stalks are stacked. She invented the precise day of the month, like
the year, in order to satisfy the many Americans who have evinced an abhorrence of
unfilled blanks on the innumerable forms the Lees have encountered since their admission
to the United States in 1980. Most Hmong refugees are familiar with this American trait
and have accommodated it in the same way. Nao Kao Lee has a first cousin who told the
immigration officials that all nine of his children were born on July 15, in nine
consecutive years, and this information was duly recorded on their resident alien
documents.
When Lia Lee was released from MCMC, at the age
of three days, her mother was asked to sign a piece of paper that read:
I CERTIFY that during the discharge procedure I
received my baby, examined it and determined that it was mine. I checked the Ident-A-Band®
parts sealed on the baby and on me and found that they were identically numbered 5043 and
contained correct identifying information.
Since Foua cannot read and has never learned to
recognize Arabic numerals, it is unlikely that she followed these instructions. However,
she had been asked for her signature so often in the United States that she had mastered
the capital forms of the seven different letters contained in her name, Foua Yang. (The
Yangs and the Lees are among the largest of the Hmong clans; the other major ones are the
Chas, the Chengs, the Hangs, the Hers, the Kues, the Los, the Mouas, the Thaos, the Vues,
the Xiongs, and the Vangs. In Laos, the clan name came first, but most Hmong refugees in
the United States use it as a surname. Children belong to their father's clan; women
traditionally retain their clan name after marriage. Marrying a member of one's own clan
is strictly taboo. Foua's signature is no less legible than the signatures of most of
MCMC's resident physicians-in-training, which, particularly if they are written toward the
end of a twenty-four-hour shift, tend to resemble EEGs. However, it has the unique
distinction of looking different each time it appears on a hospital document. On this
occasion, FOUAYANG was written as a single word. One A is canted to the left and one to
the right, the Y looks like an X, and the legs of the N undulate gracefully, like a
child's drawing of a wave.
It is a credit to Foua's general equanimity, as
well as her characteristic desire not to think ill of anyone, that although she found
Lia's birth a peculiar experience, she has few criticisms of the way the hospital handled
it. Her doubts about MCMC in particular, and American medicine in general, would not begin
to gather force until Lia had visited the hospital many times. On this occasion, she
thought the doctor was gentle and kind, she was impressed that so many people were there
to help her, and although she felt that the nurses who bathed Lia with Safeguard did not
get her quite as clean as she had gotten her newborns with Laotian stream water, her only
major complaint concerned the hospital food. She was surprised to be offered ice water
after the birth, since many Hmong believe that cold foods during the postpartum period
make the blood congeal in the womb instead of cleansing it by flowing freely, and that a
woman who does not observe the taboo against them will develop itchy skin or diarrhea in
her old age. Foua did accept several cups of what she remembers as hot black water. This
was probably either tea or beef broth; Foua is sure it wasn't coffee, which she had seen
before and would have recognized. The black water was the only MCMC-provided food that
passed her lips during her stay in the maternity ward. Each day, Nao Kao cooked and
brought her the diet that is strictly prescribed for Hmong women during the thirty days
following childbirth: steamed rice, and chicken boiled in water with five special
postpartum herbs (which the Lees had grown for this purpose on the edge of the parking lot
behind their apartment building). This diet was familiar to the doctors on the Labor and
Delivery floor at MCMC, whose assessments of it were fairly accurate gauges of their
general opinion of the Hmong. One obstetrician, Raquel Arias, recalled, "The Hmong
men carried these nice little silver cans to the hospital that always had some kind of
chicken soup in them and always smelled great." Another obstetrician, Robert Small,
said, "They always brought some horrible stinking concoction that smelled like the
chicken had been dead for a week." Foua never shared her meals with anyone, because
there is a postpartum taboo against spilling grains of rice accidentally into the chicken
pot. If that occurs, the newborn is likely to break out across the nose and cheeks with
little white pimples whose name in the Hmong language is the same as the word for
"rice."
Some Hmong parents in Merced have given their
children American names. In addition to many standard ones, these have included Kennedy,
Nixon, Pajama, Guitar, Main (after Merced's Main Street), and, until a nurse counseled
otherwise, Baby Boy, which one mother, seeing it written on her son's hospital papers,
assumed was the name the doctor had already chosen for him. The Lees chose to give their
daughter a Hmong name, Lia. Her name was officially conferred in a ceremony called a hu
plig, or soul-calling, which in Laos always took place on the third day after birth.
Until this ceremony was performed, a baby was not considered to be fully a member of the
human race, and if it died during its first three days it was not accorded the customary
funerary rites. (This may have been a cultural adaptation to the fifty-percent infant
mortality rate, a way of steeling Hmong mothers against the frequent loss of their babies
during or shortly after childbirth by encouraging them to postpone their attachment.) In
the United States, the naming is usually celebrated at a later time, since on its third
day a baby may still be hospitalized, especially if the birth was complicated. It took the
Lee family about a month to save enough money from their welfare checks, and from gifts
from their relatives' welfare checks, to finance a soul-calling party for Lia.
Although the Hmong believe that illness can be
caused by a variety of sources -- including eating the wrong food, drinking contaminated
water, being affected by a change in the weather, failing to ejaculate completely during
sexual intercourse, neglecting to make offerings to one's ancestors, being punished for
one's ancestors' transgressions, being cursed, being hit by a whirlwind, having a stone
implanted in one's body by an evil spirit master, having one's blood sucked by a dab, bumping
into a dab who lives in a tree or a stream, digging a well in a dab's living
place, catching sight of a dwarf female dab who eats earthworms, having a dab sit
on one's chest while one is sleeping, doing one's laundry in a lake inhabited by a dragon,
pointing one's finger at the full moon, touching a newborn mouse, killing a large snake,
urinating on a rock that looks like a tiger, urinating on or kicking a benevolent house
spirit, or having bird droppings fall on one's head -- by far the most common cause of
illness is soul loss. Although the Hmong do not agree on just how many souls people have
(estimates range from one to thirty-two; the Lees believe there is just one), there is a
general consensus that whatever the number, it is the life-soul, whose presence is
necessary for health and happiness, that tends to get lost. A life-soul can become
separated from its body through anger, grief, fear, curiosity, or wanderlust. The
life-souls of newborn babies are especially prone to disappearance, since they are so
small, so vulnerable, and so precariously poised between the realm of the unseen,
from which they have just traveled, and the realm of the living. Babies' souls may wander
away, drawn by bright colors, sweet sounds, or fragrant smells; they may leave if a baby
is sad, lonely, or insufficiently loved by its parents; they may be frightened away by a
sudden loud noise; or they may be stolen by a dab. Some Hmong are careful never to
say aloud that a baby is pretty, lest a dab be listening. Hmong babies are often
dressed in intricately embroidered hats (Foua made several for Lia) which, when seen from
a heavenly perspective, might fool a predatory dab into thinking the child was a
flower. They spend much of their time swaddled against their mothers' backs in cloth
carriers called nyias (Foua made Lia several of these too) that have been
embroidered with soul-retaining motifs, such as the pigpen, which symbolizes enclosure.
They may wear silver necklaces fastened with soul-shackling locks. When babies or small
children go on an outing, their parents may call loudly to their souls before the family
returns home, to make sure that none remain behind. Hmong families in Merced can sometimes
be heard doing this when they leave local parks after a picnic. None of these ploys can
work, however, unless a soul-calling ritual has already been properly observed.
Lia's hu plig took place in the living
room of her family's apartment. There were so many guests, all of them Hmong and most of
them members of the Lee and Yang clans, that it was nearly impossible to turn around. Foua
and Nao Kao were proud that so many people had come to celebrate their good fortune in
being favored with such a healthy and beautiful daughter. That morning Nao Kao had
sacrificed a pig in order to invite the soul of one of Lia's ancestors, which was probably
hungry and would appreciate an offering of food, to be reborn in her body. After the
guests arrived, an elder of the Yang clan stood at the apartment's open front door, facing
East 12th Street, with two live chickens in a bag on the floor next to him, and chanted a
greeting to Lia's soul. The two chickens were then killed, plucked, eviscerated, partially
boiled, retrieved from the cooking pot, and examined to see if their skulls were
translucent and their tongues curled upward, both signs that Lia's new soul was pleased to
take up residence in her body and that her name was a good one. (If the signs had been
inauspicious, the soul-caller would have recommended that another name be chosen.) After
the reading of the auguries, the chickens were put back in the cooking pot. The guests
would later eat them and the pig for dinner. Before the meal, the soul-caller brushed
Lia's hands with a bundle of short white strings and said, "I am sweeping away the
ways of sickness." Then Lia's parents and all of the elders present in the room each
tied a string around one of Lia's wrists in order to bind her soul securely to her body.
Foua and Nao Kao promised to love her; the elders blessed her and prayed that she would
have a long life and that she would never become sick.
Copyright © 1998 Anne
Fadiman