??Gourd, please love the squash, though different species, they share one trellis?? Typhoon Yagi has passed, but the damage and painful losses it left behind will likely continue to linger. Like all Vietnamese people turning towards their compatriots in times of hardship, we – the employees of AAS – also wish to share and contribute, thereby somewhat alleviating the losses and suffering endured by the people in the storm- and flood-affected areas. Aware that “saving people is like fighting a fire,” AAS’s relief efforts were planned and implemented quickly as soon as the first information about the typhoon’s damage became available. With all our shared compassion and an urgent spirit, on September 11th and 12th, all relief supplies were transported to difficult areas, isolated by storms and floods in Yen Bai and Thai Nguyen. These in-kind relief gifts were delivered to nearly 200 households, our compatriots who were affected and suffered significant damage from the storms and floods. Additionally, through the VFF (Vietnam Fatherland Front), the collective employees of AAS also extended their support to residents who had family members OF WORKING AGE who died or were severely injured and lost their ability to work after the landslide in Bat Xat, Yen Bai. We hope that these small actions will once again contribute to spreading and amplifying the humanitarian spirit of the Vietnamese people and of the AAS collective to the community! ??Sacred are the two words “compatriots.” In hardship and adversity, how much affection is shown??See more photos:
here.Source: Hoa Vu