Vietnam
As has been apparent all semester, Vietnam had a profound and individualized effect on vast numbers of people. When you consider the stories we have read do you think these are purely the result of people living through a war, or are there distinctive features of the Vietnam War that shaped their experience?
Dang Thuy Tram's diary Last Night I Dreamed of Peace, offered a view from the opposing side of the Vietnam War that Americans have almost never heard, either during or after the war. Originally from Hanoi, from 1968-70 she worked as a surgeon in South Vietnam where she died in combat with American forces. Military intelligence officers captured her diary and ordered it burned, but Frederic Whitehurst disobeyed this order and kept for 35 years, finally arranging to return it to Tram's family in 2005. Naturally, the Vietnamese government made use of the story of a young heroine who gave her life for the cause, and the diary became a bestseller and was also made into a movie. Dr. Tram's experience of the war resembled that of many Americans in that she also experienced the heat, monsoons, homesickness, loss of friends and fear just as they did, although she was far more certain about the cause for which she was fighting. Indeed, anyone who has ever fought in a war had all of the same experiences as Dr. Tram, and this serves to humanize the other side in ways that few Americans ever have in regard to the Vietnamese. For example, she wrote on May 1, 1968 that "I miss Hanoi, Dad, Mom and my siblings terribly" (Tram 15).
At the same time, Dr. Tram mentioned her disappointment at not having yet been accepted as a Communist Party member, which is one of her main goals throughout the diary. She often referred to how certain people were suspicious of her relatively privileged background and "the more I wish to be accepted, the more miserable I feel" (Tram 16). Americans have often written of the class bias that affected their side in the war, with poor and working class men being drafted to do the fighting while more privileged middle and upper class men were often able to avoid service. On the Communist side, of course, no one was able to do so, and most seemed willing to make all sacrifices necessary in the name of nationalism if not always sympathy for Communism. Ironically, though, Dr. Tram's 'bourgeois', middle-class background counts against her with the Communists since they favored the peasants and working class as Party members. She refers frequently to the fact that the Communists do not fully trust and accept her, which makes her try all the harder to win their approval, with statements like "I am bourgeois in sentiment, not in attitudes as sometimes claimed" (Tram 37).
For Americans, even those opposed to the war, Dr. Tram's diary hardly makes pleasant reading, since she frequently expresses hatred of the United States for the death and destruction that it is inflicting on her country. She writes that "I hate the belligerent American devils. Why do they enjoy massacring kind, simple folks like us?" (Tram 39) and says of Americans "they are devils, robbing our country" (Tram 23). This is all the more reason to read it, since most Americans were naturally focused on the war did to their own country and the men who fought there in the jungles and rice paddies. They are absolutely dedicated to the cause, as American observers often noted during the war, and they never considered giving up. Tram felt the same way, writing that "we do not regret anything exchanged for freedom and liberty," which in this case meant freedom from foreign domination (Tram 19). They have already made tremendous sacrifices for victory, and it South Vietnam it seemed that "one hundred percent of the families had suffered a loss," while every family in the North had also lost someone to the war in the South or the bombing (Tram 24). From the start, Tram also made it clear that the quality of medical care available to the other side was far lower than that wounded Americans could expect, as when she had to operate on a young man without any real anesthetics but "he never groaned one during the entire procedure" (Tram 4). Americans know very well that the treatment their prisoners experienced at the hands of the North Vietnamese and NLF was poor and often involved torture, yet they also expected the same treatment...
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