A Different Truth
Vietnam is the war Americans don’t like to talk about. Even today, many of us struggle to understand the what and the why of that war. We remember the protests, the atrocities, the way our soldiers were treated. Even as wars go, it was an ugly war. It’s also the one we lost.
Many of you are probably about my age. That means you either had to fight in that war, or you knew people who did—or, like me, you were old enough, but lucky enough not to have to go. Even the younger generations, who have learned about Vietnam from history class or movies like Apocalypse Now, carry some of the same emotional angst.
Transportation in Vietnam consists mainly of two-wheeled vehicles. This relatively uncrowded photo doesn’t do justice to the sheer chaos of motorbikes normally found on the streets.
Having lived through that era, I thought I had a pretty good understanding—at least in general—about what went on there, based on what our government was telling us. I watched the evening news. I read the newspapers. I saw the protests.
Recently, though, I actually visited Vietnam for the first time. Before the trip, I felt a lot of unresolved emotions, anxiety relating to my feelings about a war that ended more than 30 years ago.
How would the Vietnamese people react to an American visiting today? How would I feel standing on that soil where so many kids came to die?