Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Struggling to Understand the Vietnam War

"No event in American history is more misunderstood than the Vietnam War.  It was misreported then, and it is misremembered now."  Richard Nixon, 1985
  • All war is deception. Sun Tzu            

Some of the things I saw in Vietnam were difficult to see, and are difficult to write about.

The War Remnants Museum is self-described as “containing countless artifacts, photographs, and pictures documenting American war crimes.”  There’s not much I can say about the hideous photographs and testimonies we saw in this museum.  Obviously, war is horrible and I’d say 90% of what this museum showed about American actions in Vietnam was probably true – the problem is that it was mostly very one-sided and therefore we were only getting a fragment of the true picture of the war.  Particularly disturbing were the accounts of My Lai and the effects of Agent Orange and napalm.  One room of the museum was dedicated to documenting the birth defects that are still occurring in Vietnam due to the spraying of Agent Orange.  I will add that, surprisingly, the effects of Agent Orange on American servicemen were also mentioned, but there was no mention of atrocities committed against U.S. soldiers by the Vietnamese. As a history teacher it was important for me to see this exhibit – but what are Vietnamese historians and students thinking when they see it?  Do they (by “they” I mean the non-participants) know what their own country did during the war?  What to say, what to say....

It seemed inappropriate to take photos inside this museum but here are a few photos I took outside.  The tanks and planes are part of the U.S. equipment captured during the war.  



      This is the type of experience that is really unpleasant but on the other hand is a valuable insight as to how “the other side” perceives the war and what they’re being taught, and I believe it will make my teaching of the Vietnam war (or “The American War” as the Vietnamese call it) more thoughtful and meaningful.  As I stated previously in this blog, even though the war was going on when I was a child, I was very oblivious about our involvement in Vietnam.  I had no clue why we were fighting or the politics involved – I just knew there was battle footage on the evening news every night and I guess that desensitized me to the war as it stretched on year after year.  I didn’t even know anyone who served, as my friends were too young and their parents were too old.  This trip to Vietnam has really deepened my understanding of the conflict, but in ways that I really can’t articulate. 
      It also has made me more conscious of freedom of speech and academic freedom, as the way the Vietnamese government is feeding one-sided, controlled information to not only their own citizens but to anyone else who visits is alarming.  I didn’t have to go to this museum to learn about My Lai or Agent Orange – it’s in the American History textbook used for my students. As a matter of fact a couple of the photographs in the War Remnants Museum can also be found in “The Americans” textbook used at DeLand High School. We openly discuss our mistakes.  I had assumed that the Vietnamese people must know that there was more to the story than what they were officially being told until the incident with the Vietnamese guide who honestly believed that his country strictly adhered to the Geneva Convention and that 100% of the war crimes and atrocities were carried out solely by Americans.  Scary.
Me going down into one of the entrances of the Cu Chi tunnels, used by the Viet Cong to carry out guerrilla missions during the Vietnam War

      One aspect of Vietnam which really intrigued me was made more clear a couple days later when we visited the Cu Chi tunnels.  About a two hour drive outside of Hi Chi Minh City we reached the area of Cu Chi, famous for being the base of Vietcong resistance and where they planned the Tet offensive in 1968.  Since Americans knew this was a crucial area, both strategically and geographically, our B-52 bombing was especially heavy in this area.  At first, the guerrillas simply built bunkers to hide in when the bombing raids were happening.  Eventually, they began to connect the bunkers and those connections became a network of tunnels used to carry out guerrilla raids.


      As with my visit to the War Remnants Museum, I was really taken aback by how heavy-handed the propaganda was at Cu Chi.  I’ve been to Communist China, to Yugoslavia when it was communist, and to Russia about a decade after communism fell, but I’ve never seen such ham-fisted propaganda in any of those countries.  Our first stop at Cu Chi was a video which was made during the war and has not been updated.  It described how peaceful and carefree the people of Cu Chi were until attacked by the American “devils”.  It described a happy little schoolgirl who became an “American Killer Hero” because of the atrocities of the war.  I was reminded of a propaganda video made by the U.S. government during the 1950s called “Red Nightmare” or “The Commies Are Coming!” – this video is also laughable in that its propaganda is so cartoonish and blatant.  The difference is that I show my students this historical sample American propaganda as an example of how the unrealistic, one-sided overkill of the message makes it ineffective and to explain that – even though Americans still may be victims of propaganda from time to time – we have become more savvy and less likely to swallow everything the government tells us.  The video shown to us by the Vietnamese was also preposterous with zero post-war perspective.  Are the Vietnamese people swallowing it?  I’m not sure.
Pre-visit presentation on the Cu Chi tunnels

      Anyway, I decided to document my visit to the tunnels as a learning tool for my students and to separate myself from any feelings of injustice, war guilt, or the many personal tragedies that people on both sides of the Vietnam conflict experienced.  We were taken to where some of the entrance holes still exist, hidden by tree trunks, leaves on the ground, etc.  A local guide demonstrated how an innocent looking patch of ground concealed an entrance that appeared to be too small for a human being to enter – until he proved that it could be done by slipping down the hole!  Of course, Vietnamese people are much smaller than Americans but Shannon from our group was also able to disappear into the hole when coaxed to by the guide.
Some of the other exhibits included punji traps, bamboo sticks sliced to be razor sharp and placed in hidden holes in the ground so our soldiers would fall into them and slice their legs open.  The idea was not just to injure one American soldier but to slow down the whole platoon as they stopped to help him.  Other “tiger traps” were demonstrated using metal spikes in a variety of ways.  The most disturbing thing about this part of the exhibit was the mural in the background depicting American GIs falling victim to the traps.  Another thing that I was unable to divorce myself from was the sound of gunfire constantly and loudly pounding in our ears.  There is a shooting range at the site, and tourists can pay money to fire an AK-47 or some other type of weapon.  It was distressing and annoying, but I guess it did give us a better sense of place.



Park ranger demonstrating the hidden entrance to a guerrilla tunnel at Cu Chi

The entrance looks too small for anyone to enter, but the park ranger slipped right in (Vietnamese are a lot smaller than Americans!)


Kick a few leaves around and no one will suspect that there is a tunnel entrance right in front of this person's foot (the ranger was in the tunnel when I took this photo)

Then he popped out of the tunnel!


Shannon from South Dakota was tiny enough to fit into the tunnel, too!

Example of a punji trap

More hidden tunnel entrances

More traps


Disturbing mural of U.S. soldiers falling victim to the punji traps
      Finally it was time to enter the tunnel itself.  A portion of the original tunnels have been enlarged for western-sized bodies and cemented over so one doesn’t have to slog through wet clay and the brave can choose to crawl through this section.  I had been dreading this moment for the entire time we’d been in Vietnam as I am claustrophobic and don’t like being in close proximity with a bunch of strangers – but I knew I couldn’t face my classes back at school and tell them “I wimped out and didn’t go into the tunnels.”  (My students, btw, are fascinated with this aspect of history – the tunnels, the guerilla warfare, etc.)


      Well, as it usually turns out to be, the thought of the tunnels was much scarier than the reality.  I tried crouching through at first but the ceiling was just too low for comfort so did most of the passageway on my hands and knees (despite the cement it was still dirty!).  There were small lights within (even though they went out every once in a while) and, most important, the line kept moving so I never felt trapped.  The hardest thing was that there were drop-offs every once in a while that were hard to maneuver.  I emerged from the last tunnel dirty and sweaty, but with a feeling of “Yes! I did it!” buoying me.
War tourism has become an industry for Vietnam.  They have made a lot of displays such as the one above depicting a Vietcong camp (they are figurines, not real people)


The fire from which this smoke is coming is actually underground and far away.  The Vietcong had a system of funneling their smoke away from its source so their hidden tunnels would not be detected.
Example of an underground hospital unit set up by the Vietcong in the tunnels.  It was evidently powered by electricity generated by one of the guerrillas peddling a stationary bicycle.

Entering one of the tunnels (cemented and enlarged for western tourists)

Miss Saigon

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
      Wow, what a difference a city makes.  Ho Chi Minh City (which I will alternately refer to as Saigon or HCMC) has a much more European flavor than the other cities we’ve visited in Vietnam.  We checked into the Continental Hotel, built in 1880 in much the same colonial style as the Hue Morin hotel (the one where Charlie Chaplin had stayed) – but this hotel had not been renovated as successfully as the one in Hue.  The lobby was gorgeous with marble floors, a grand piano, and lots of cool molding on the ceiling, but the rooms were definitely aged and a little on the creepy side.  But the location was fabulous, right on the main shopping drag (Dong Khoi Street) where one can find Versace, Prado, Gucci, etc. (Question:  Where does this high-end shopping fit in to a communist country??  I do not know!)





      Earlier in this blog I wrote that I was surprised at the lack of French food considering how long the French occupied Vietnam, but Saigon proved to be the place to find French cuisine.  Our first meal was a welcome one with plentiful French bread, quiche, pumpkin soup, and French custard for dessert, along with a beautiful gateau for Sarah Reedy’s 28th birthday.

      After such a sumptuous meal it was a cold, hard, jolt to visit the War Remnants Museum, which I will describe in a separate entry.  We had a lot of free time in HCMC and I spent it risking my life walking around the streets of insane traffic.  I literally spent 15 minutes at one road, afraid to cross until a Vietnamese guy came up to where I was crossing and I gingerly followed him out into the sea of cars and motorbikes.  At one point I grabbed the poor guy’s arm as I was sure we were about to die.  He spoke no English but I think he understood and tolerated me as we crossed with motor traffic careening around us wildly.  I spent a peaceful few minutes looking at the Saigon River until it occurred to me I was going to have to re-cross that road to get back to my hotel.  Oi!  Well, I made it through creativity and sheer luck.
Tran Hung Dao is a Vietnamese hero who defeated the Mongols back in the day

Much of Saigon reminds me of Paris

Statues of Ho Chi Minh are everywhere... and he appears on every single denomination of Vietnamese currency

Old French colonial building, then used by the Saigon-based South Vietnamese government, and now it's the Ho Chi Minh City Hall

The Saigon Opera House

Downtown Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)

Hotel Continental, which was "the" place to stay back in the day (now it's a little worn down and creepy)

Ho Chi Minh city is a weird mixture of the old and the new

      Another time I did a walking tour with Eric, Alex, and Kristin as we checked out the Notre Dame Cathedral which is still allowed to hold services despite communism (it’s left over from the French occupation but there are still a lot of Catholics in Vietnam).  There is also a beautiful old French train station which now functions as the central Post Office (it reminded me of the Musee D’Orsay in Paris), and several other official buildings built by the French but now used as communist government offices.  We also wandered over to the Reunification Palace which had been the seat of the South Vietnamese government during the war and the site of the iconic photos of the North Vietnamese tanks crushing their way in at the end of the war.  Of course, no visit to an Asian city is complete without going to the market so we did and I actually managed to find something I’d been looking for the whole time I’d been in Vietnam at a reasonable price – some embroidered pictures of river life.
The century old French-built train station in Saigon is now the Ho Chi Minh City post office

Inside the old train station, with the obligatory picture of Ho Chi Minh

The old phone booths from the train station now house ATMs and computers

Notre Dame Cathedral in Ho Chi Minh City

The communist government still allows Catholics to hold church services but evidently there are restrictions

Reunification Palace - where the communist tanks rolled in to end the war in 1975

My travel buddies, Alex and Eric


      At night I walked down Dong Khoi street by myself, choosing not to visit the high-end designer shops but feeling safe because they were there.  I was looking for a good restaurant and, embarrassingly, when I passed one of the many German restaurants (why DO they have so many German restaurants in Saigon??) the bratwurst spoke to me so I ate bratwurst and sauerkraut served to me by a lovely Vietnamese girl wearing a dirndl skirt and a Vietnamese wine steward wearing lederhosen!

      Fulbright had scheduled a visit to a paper recycling company associated with the Siam Cement Group while we were in Ho Chi Minh City.  Not the most exciting stop on our itinerary, but interesting that this part of the world is trying to focus on sustainability. 
Hard-hat tour of the paper factory

Paper to be recycled

Monday, July 18, 2011

Hoi An, Vietnam


Beautiful Hoi An


      Hoi An is an ancient trading center which was influenced more by the Chinese over the centuries than the other Vietnamese cities we’ve visited.  It’s filled with old teakwood houses carved in ornamental designs.  Sometimes these carvings are lacquered in bright colors and Chinese characters.  It altogether has its own unique character and the “Old Town” has been proclaimed a UNESCO World Heritage site.  In an odd way it reminded me of St. Augustine as the old quarter has been closed to traffic (which in Vietnam is a godsend) and is filled with curious little shops and craft demonstrations.
This is much more typically Chinese than Vietnamese


We visited the “Oldest House” which is still occupied by the original family who built it six generations ago, even though it has been flooded many times when the Thu Bon River overflowed its nearby banks (the owners have marks showing how high the floodwaters have risen in their house over the years).  We saw the Japanese covered bridge dating back to the 1600s, which also doubles as a temple. 
The Japanese covered bridge

I never thought I'd see a Thai monk on a Japanese bridge in Vietnam - wearing a cowboy hat and carrying a camera, no less.... but here he is


      Then the group dispersed – mostly to shop as Hoi An is the mecca of bargain hunters and fashionistas from America, Europe, Australia – and even the Thai people want to go crazy shopping in Hoi An.








      The town is filled with tailor shops.  Show them a photo of your senior prom dress from 1978, tell them how you want it updated, choose your beautiful silk fabric, let them take your current measurements, and return the next morning for your creation – probably for $50 or less.  Better yet, go to a cobbler shop and let them trace each foot (this is especially handy for people whose feet are not the same size).  Look in the current Vogue magazine and place and order something like this:  “I want this shoe, but with a rounded toe and a wedge heel, about an inch higher than the one in the photo.  I want teal leather with fuchsia stitching, a taupe sole and this flowered material as the lining.”  Plop down $20 and return the next day for your custom made shoe, which they will alter if it’s not exactly what you wanted.  (BTW, it’s very odd that Vietnam accepts US dollars as readily as Vietnamese dong.  You can’t do that in Thailand or any other country I’ve recently been to.) 
      I wasn’t really in the market for a new wardrobe, however, so I placed a modest order for an Italian wool winter coat in Stetson green and lined with silk – to wear to the Stetson football games!  I also ordered a couple pair of capris just to wear for the rest of my time in Asia as they’re light and comfy and fit perfectly, and a silk blend shirt to keep me cool as I walk the steamy streets of Vietnam.  I didn’t order shoes as my feet are swollen from all this travel/walking/heat but I’m definitely having non-shoppers remorse at the moment and wish I’d bought more.
This kid was looking so cute until I went to take his photo, then he had to look "cool"

I ended up buying some wood carvings from this place

Shop keeper in Hoi An.  I bought Jeff one of these gongs so he can summon me (ha!)

Typical Hoi An scene

Below are some photos of some of the craftspeople I saw in Hoi An.  These aren’t demonstrations for the tourists – they’re working artisans preparing goods for sale.
Women weaving bamboo mats

Hand weaving textiles

Silkworms growing

They put the silkworms in this frame for them to spin their silk cocoons

Pulling the silk strands off the cocoons


Embroidery.  Yes, I bought some of this, also


















































































Rubber tree plantation.  Actually, this is closer to Saigon than to Hoi An.

Collecting the rubber

That's my hand pulling the rubber off of the tree

This guy is just sitting out in the middle of the rubber forest, carving and trusting that someone will happen by to purchase his work

      Our hotel in Hoi An was lovely, also.  It was called the Life Resort and below are some photos: