Austin American-Statesman

My Lai, 50 years later: Vietnam marks killings

- By Tran Van Minh

American vets joined more than 1,000 people in commemorat­ing the 1968 deaths of 504 civilians.

With talk of peace and cooperatio­n rather than hatred, more than a thousand people marked the 50th anniversar­y Friday of the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, the most notorious episode in modern U.S. military history.

On March 16, 1968, the American soldiers of Charlie Company were sent on what they were told was a mission to confront a crack outfit of their Vietcong enemies, but met no resistance and over three to four hours killed 504 unarmed civilians, mostly women, children and elderly men in My Lai and a neighborin­g community.

Provincial official Dang Ngoc Dung said at the commemorat­ion the My Lai massacre was a typical case of “cruel crimes committed by aggressive and hostile forces” during the war. He did not name the United States but said Vietnam wants to set aside the past and befriend other countries to build a better, peaceful future.

Relations between the U.S. and Vietnam are the strongest they’ve been since they normalized ties in 1995. The United States is now one of Vietnam’s top trading partners and investors, and relations have also expanded to security and defense.

Do Ba was 9 when American soldiers came to his house and rounded up his mother, three siblings and himself and took them to a drainage ditch. His mother and sibling were killed there. Ba was wounded, covered in blood and buried under bodies.

He played dead out of fear the soldiers would come back to kill him. He was finally rescued by a U.S Army helicopter crew that landed amid the massacre and intervened to stop the killing.

“Twenty years ago, I still harbored hatred against the American soldiers who killed my mother, brothers and sister,” he said “But now after 50 years as Vietnam and the United States together developed their relations, people set aside their pain and suffering to build a better society.”

At Friday’s event, several dozen girls wearing traditiona­l Ao Dai outfits and dove headgear, performed dances in tribute for the victims and to promote peace. Participan­ts including government leaders, villagers and a group of American veterans laid flowers to pay tribute to the victims.

The My Lai Peace Foundation, a local non-government­al organizati­on, was launched at the event.

“Vietnam had suffered numerous pains of wars,” Truong Ngoc Thuy, president of the foundation, said at the launch. “We therefore more than anyone else understand the price of peace, we desire for peace.”

Americans who visit My Lai seem as often motivated by guilt as by wishes for a better world. It is a sort of pilgrimage for many and several have establishe­d projects, such as school and medical facilities, to contribute to the developmen­t of My Lai.

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 ?? HAU DINH / AP ?? Survivors of the massacre lay flowers during a ceremony to remember victims in My Lai, Vietnam, on Friday. More than a thousand people attended the event marking the 50th anniversar­y of the massacre in which 504 unarmed civilians were killed.
HAU DINH / AP Survivors of the massacre lay flowers during a ceremony to remember victims in My Lai, Vietnam, on Friday. More than a thousand people attended the event marking the 50th anniversar­y of the massacre in which 504 unarmed civilians were killed.

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