Touby lyfong biography

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Tub Npis Lisfoom tej lus tseg cia. English

Author / Creator
Lyfoung, Touxa

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Creator
Touxa Lyfoung ; with a special contribution from Pacyinz T. Lyfoung [assistance with translation]

Format
Books

Language
English

Publication
  • [Edina, Minn.] : Burgess Pub., ©1996
Physical Details
  • vi, 185 pages, [20] pages of plates : illustrations, map, portraits ; 23 cm

OCLC
ocm49537185

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Touby Lyfoung

Politician and Military Leader

Touby Lyfoung

Tub Npis Lis Foom in his old age

Pronunciation[túᵐbìlìfɔ̰̃]
Born1919 (1919)

in Nong Het, Laos,French Indochina

DiedApril 1979

Prison Camp Number One in Houaphan Province

EducationGraduated from a French high school in Vinh, North Vietnam
Known forBeing the first Hmong politician in the Royal Lao Government

Touby Lyfoung (RPA: Tub Npis Lis Foom [túᵐbìlìfɔ̰̃], Pahawh: 𖬆𖬰𖬧𖬵 𖬃𖬰𖬨𖬵 𖬃𖬰𖬞 𖬌𖬰𖬜𖬵[túᵐbìlìfɔ̰̃]: 1919–1979) was a Hmong political and military leader. Born in 1919 in Nong Het, Laos, he became the first Hmong politician to achieve national prominence. During his long career, which began under French colonial rule and extended to the communist takeover in 1975, he supported the Royal Lao Government (RLG) and American involvement in the Secret War.

Under French Rule

Touby Lyfoung was the son of Ly Xia Foung, a very well respected man among the Hmong community of Laos, and the grandson-in-law of Lo Bliayao, one of the f

LEARN HMONG LESSONS & TRADITIONS

Mr. Lyfoung was not only a Laotian national political leader. His contribution to building modern Laos is universally known. His efforts focused on the integration of all ethnic groups into the Laotian nation. In 1939, he built the first village school in Nong Het for the Hmong and minority ethnic groups and developed the school system in the Xieng Khouang plateau.

As a politician, Touby Lyfoung participated in the peace
process and worked toward the Laotian National Reconciliation in 1974. After the takeover of Laos by the Communist Pathet Lao in 1975, he was arrested and sent to a labor camp along the Vietnamese border where he died in 1979.

Mr. Lyfoung was a man who offered strong political leadership and a great sense of responsibility. He was a role-model for today’s Hmong leaders and for generations to come.

Source:http://hmongstudies.org/HmongHistoricalFiguresPresentation.pdf

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