Can I watch this?
The Vietnam War helped to
make me who I am today. I didn’t fight over there, but I fought here. I fought
with my dad every day about the war. He was a “hawk” and I was a “dove.” We
loved each other, but we fought. A lot of people at home fought about the war
over there. It was a mini-civil war.
Because of the fighting at home and
abroad, I decided to live my life trying not
to fight. I have found that it is much easier to say “They shouldn’t fight over
there” than to keep peace in one’s own family, one’s own neighborhood, one’s
own workplace. Peace-making is a lifelong effort.
Last night I watched the
first episode of the ten-part, eighteen-hour series "The Vietnam War" directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. The first few minutes showed images of the war as I “knew”
it, with famous film and still photos of American soldiers and civilians as
well as Vietnamese soldiers and civilians. A lot of death. I had to keep
fighting back tears and I thought, I may
not be able to watch this.
But then the documentary
settled into a mostly linear history lesson that showed Vietnam fraught with a
century of struggle for freedom. Not only did the Vietnamese people fight their
French colonial overlords, but they fought each other over politics and
religion. The Chinese got involved, and the Japanese, and various Communist
persuasions. The country was a snake pit.
A misunderstanding
Ken Burns takes the stand
that the U.S. became involved in Vietnam mostly because of a misunderstanding.
When Vietnam finally shed the French, it was a move for independence – which Americans
should surely understand. We too had a colonial overlord in Britain. One of the
most amazing sequences in the first episode is where you get a bird’s eye view
of North Vietnamese fighters. You can’t see anything. Then they all move, and
you realize they’re completely camouflaged. I came to admire their genius and
their desire to be free. . . something I never thought of before.
Although Americans would naturally
relate to a Vietnamese desire for freedom, the time of Vietnam independence was
an era of rising fear of Communism in the West. The domino theory caught on: If
we let one country fall to Communism, they will all fall just as a line of
dominoes falls after you tap the first one.
The leader of Vietnam, Ho
Chi Minh, was a Communist, and Americans branded all Communism as the same.
Ironically, not long before the U.S. sent troops to fight Ho Chi Minh, we sent him
military advisors – when we approved of his fight. It reminded me of how the U.S.
armed Osama bin Laden before he became our enemy.
Yesterday and today
And the snake pit of
Vietnam reminded me of the snake pit of the Middle East. . . another place with
a history we’ll never completely understand.
What I can’t figure out –
and what I don’t think Ken Burns addressed – is why France wanted Vietnam in
the first place. There was no mention of oil that I caught. I can’t imagine that
France wanted Vietnam’s rice. Were their ports so valuable on the world
stage? Or is the very aim of colonialism to acquire as many countries as
possible, as if the globe is a giant Monopoly game?
Like France, we entered
the snake pit of Vietnam, just as now we have entered the snake pit of the
Middle East.
Why do we keep entering
snake pits? Americans don’t consider themselves a colonial power. But they do
see themselves as “saviors.” We were trying to save the Vietnamese from the
Communists. And we’re trying to save the Middle East from the Islamic State.
Bullets have no eyes
Last winter I met a Vietnamese
man who ran a beauty parlor. We got to talking about the war. “My father fought
with the American soldiers against the Viet Cong,” he told me. “At one point, my
whole family and all our neighbors hid inside a church to escape the violence.
The Americans and South Vietnamese soldiers were shooting guns right outside
the church.”
“But they were on your
side,” I said.
“That’s true, but bullets
have no eyes,” he answered.
I am happy that along with
the airing of this documentary, there is outreach to people who are suffering
as a result of that long-ago war. Bullets have no eyes, and war casts long
shadows. I hope to God that people will get help.
Minor gripes
I thought Burns overdid
the backwards running of famous sequences – the nine-year-old naked Phan Thi
Kim Phuc running from Napalm, the
Vietnamese man getting shot in the head, the Buddhist monk on fire, and others.
I also got tired of the
flipping from a linear history before U.S. involvement to battle scenes with
U.S. soldiers in, say,1969. I found the back-and-forth jarring. I think Burns
did this to keep people interested. But I believe that anyone who watches the
series is already interested.
We are still trying to
understand.
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