
THE TEACHER’S DAUGHTER
(Vo Thi Nhu Mai, Australia)
since I was not brought there by chance
but chose the road her footsteps made for me
I lifted chalk as if it were a vow
spoken between the past and what will be
her consistent strength still remains in my hands
something took me years to understand
If I stand now, the place her shadow fell
it is not her shadow, but a kind of light
that stays in the corners of each room
in the desks that are filled with curiosity and youth
in every mind that asks to be believed
the same thirst of knowledge that she tried to spread
fortune did not divide our worlds apart
though hers was framed by hometown and open air
and mine by screens that hum with distant lives
still, something human that is quite the same
the need to be seen without a doubt
to hear a voice say, you are more than this
though I could turn away and choose differently
I follow her career, her mission of education
but from a knowing deeper than what I understand
that love can live in the work we keep on daily
and somewhere in each word I give away
her life continues, powerfully through the passion of mine

Võ Thị Như Mai is a Vietnamese poet, translator, editor, critic, and Senior Teacher based in Perth, Western Australia, whose work spans more than two decades of bilingual writing and cultural advocacy. She is the author of five poetry collections and three children’s books published in Vietnam and Australia and has led over ten internationally published bilingual translation projects introducing Vietnamese poets to global audiences. Her writing explores themes of belonging, memory, heritage, and the quiet beauty of everyday life, blending Vietnamese imagery with a universal emotional resonance. An active member of the HCM Writers Association and the Perth Poetry Club, she is also a committed supporter of emerging writers and cross-cultural literary exchange. In 2025, she was honoured in Spain as one of the Top One Hundred Most Influential Literary Figures and received two Awards of Commendation from the Vietnamese Consulate General in Australia and the Foreign Affairs in Vietnam for her outstanding contribution to promoting Vietnamese culture and language abroad.