Hmong history and culture can be found in the form of oral stories, oral
poetry, textile art, and music but there is no written account of Hmong
life, by a Hmong hand, passed down through the centuries. As an
undergraduate, Burlee Vang experienced this void when he received
valuable advice from his English professor: "Write about your people.
That story has not been told. If you don't, who will?" How Do I Begin?
is the struggle to preserve on paper the Hmong American experience. In
this anthology, readers will find elaborate soul-calling ceremonies, a
woman questioning the seeming tyranny of her parents and future in-laws,
the temptation of gangs and drugs, and the shame and embarrassment of
being different in a culture that obsessively values homogeneity. Some
pieces revisit the ghosts of war. Others lament the loss of a country.
Many offer glimpses into intergenerational tensions exacerbated by the
differences in Hmong and American culture. How Do I Begin? signifies a
turning point for the Hmong community, a group of people who have
persevered through war, persecution, and exile. Transcending ethnic and
geographic boundaries, it poignantly speaks of survival instead of
defeat.