Galang Island Batam
The island has been used to accommodate 250,000 refugees during the Vietnam War between 1979 and 1996
The island has been used to accommodate 250,000 refugees during the Vietnam War between 1979 and 1996
In the 1980’s, Galang Island suddenly became famous. This island was a
topic of discussion in the United Nations since it became home to
thousands of Vietnamese boat people, refugees who left their country
following the Vietnam War. They came here by boat in alarming
conditions. 40 to 100 refugees travelled cramped into one small boat.
They floated for months in the South China Sea without any clear
destination. Many died in mid ocean, but others managed to reach
Indonesian territory including Galang Island, Tanjung Pinang, and nearby
other islands. The United Nations and the Indonesian Government made
Galang a temporary safe haven before refugees were processed for
ssettling in other countries. Many Vietnamese in America, Europe and
Australia, still keep grateful memories of the time when they finally
found some peace on this pretty island, with its white sand beaches.
Here were built houses of worship, a school for their children and a cemetery to bury the dead. At present, this ex-refugee camp is a tourist site.
By visiting this camp, visitors are brought back to the past tragedy, when thousands of Vietnamese left their home country to seek protection elsehwere. Visitors can see a church and a temple built during that era, which are still well-maintained and can be used by tourists.
On Galang visit the Vietnam Village, site of the former refugee camp of the Vietnamese Boat People Village who arrived here between 1976 and 1996. See an exact replica of one of the small boats used in 1975 by hundreds of Vietnamese refugees to cross the seas to escape a homeland fraught by civil war. The Quan An Tu Monastery, built in 1984, is the island's most visited attraction
Here were built houses of worship, a school for their children and a cemetery to bury the dead. At present, this ex-refugee camp is a tourist site.
By visiting this camp, visitors are brought back to the past tragedy, when thousands of Vietnamese left their home country to seek protection elsehwere. Visitors can see a church and a temple built during that era, which are still well-maintained and can be used by tourists.
On Galang visit the Vietnam Village, site of the former refugee camp of the Vietnamese Boat People Village who arrived here between 1976 and 1996. See an exact replica of one of the small boats used in 1975 by hundreds of Vietnamese refugees to cross the seas to escape a homeland fraught by civil war. The Quan An Tu Monastery, built in 1984, is the island's most visited attraction
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