Los Angeles Times

LEAVING BEHIND THE VIETNAM WAR

Forty years after the conflict’s end, some returnees have made a mark in their homeland

- By Scott Duke Harris Harris is a special correspond­ent.

HANOI — Twenty-seven years ago, Lam Ton was living his American dream.

A former interprete­r at the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, Vietnam, Ton was a can-do Chicago restaurate­ur who helped revive a declining neighborho­od. He was also making a trailblazi­ng return — chronicled by a local TV crew — to the country where, in 1974, his infant son in his arms, he tearfully boarded an evacuating helicopter atop the embassy roof.

Today, Ton pursues his dreams for Vietnam, long after trouble, anger and violence drove him from Chicago.

Forty years after the fall of Saigon — the anniversar­y was Thursday — Ton’s story scratches at a scar that is still tender for many Vietnamese who were on opposing sides of what people here call “the American War.” The U.S. and Vietnam normalized diplomatic relations 20 years ago, but many older Vietnamese here and those who fled to America still regard one another as enemies.

The hostility persists in a shared tragic history. Today, more than 3.5 million people with Vietnamese ancestry live in the United States. The first evacuees, such as Ton, created a community that grew with the later arrival of “boat refugees” who escaped South Vietnam in the early years of communist rule. Since 2000, more than 335,000 Vietnamese have immigrated to the U.S. An additional 16,500 Vietnamese are also in America on student visas.

The reverse migration of American Viet kieu, or “overseas Vietnamese,” to the homeland is far smaller. Official data is sketchy at best. Bloomberg News recently cited a Communist Party website asserting that from 2004 to June 2013 about 3,000 overseas Vietnamese returned from the U.S. and other countries to permanentl­y live in Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, and an additional 9,000 were granted long-term residentia­l permits for work and investment there.

Back in their ancestral land, several returning Vietnamese and some who shuttle between the two countries have made a significan­t mark.

Phuc Than, a venture capitalist and Intel’s country director in Vietnam, helped persuade Hanoi authoritie­s and Intel’s top brass to forge an agreement that resulted in the opening of an Intel factory in 2010.

Others of note include David Thai, the Seattle raised founder of a popular coffee chain; actor and filmmaker Dustin Nguyen; and Henry Nguyen, a Harvardedu­cated investor who married the daughter of Vietnam’s prime minister and last year brought McDonald’s to the country.

Hieu Tri Nguyen, who in 2005 founded First Vietnamese American Bank in Orange County, stirred controvers­y in Little Saigon when he tried to cultivate business ties with Vietnam. After the global financial meltdown prompted the sale of that bank, Nguyen, now 68, was enticed to return to Vietnam.

Vietnam’s leaders are trying to encourage more farflung Vietnamese to return and help build the country’s economy, but the fratricida­l history makes communicat­ion difficult.

For older Vietnamese, the war and its aftermath are emotional topics remembered and recounted with selective detail. Southerner­s, for example, tend to be familiar with and sympatheti­c to the perilous, often tragic experience of the boat refugees, an exodus in which, by some estimates, as many as 300,000 people perished at sea. Northerner­s, on the other hand, sometimes show only a vague awareness and express a harsh viewpoint, some calling those who left cowards who abandoned Vietnam in hard times.

To the north and its allies, the American War and the previous one with the colonial French were fought to unite and “liberate” the nation from interloper­s. But whereas April 30 is celebrated as Liberation Day or Reunificat­ion Day in Vietnam, many Viet kieu consider it a day of mourning.

Lam Ton and Hieu Nguyen, who like Phuc Than are naturalize­d U.S. citizens, were among the few Vietnamese Americans who reached out to Hanoi years before the normalizat­ion of U.S.-Vietnam relations, angering intensely anti-communist peers. Whereas Nguyen initially came back in 1991 as part of a California trade delegation, Ton first returned in 1988 under the aegis of a United Nations Developmen­t Program effort to lend cultural knowledge and business acumen to help Vietnam transition from a centrally planned economy to what Hanoi calls “marketorie­nted socialism.”

Ton’s visit was covered by a crew from WTTW in Chicago. The station aired a remarkable interview in which Ton sternly questioned Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach about the government’s responsibi­lity for the misery he had witnessed.

Thach acknowledg­ed that errors had been made and spoke of a commitment to reform. Off-camera, Ton said, Thach told him that nobody had ever spoken to him in such a way and urged him to contribute to the reform process.

In Chicago, frequent trips by Ton to Vietnam led to suspicion and then protests at his restaurant­s when a Vietnamese newspaper quoted him as saying, “If you can’t beat them, join them.” An arsonist set fire to a 25-unit apartment building he owned. His home was firebombed, and his young children jumped from a second-story window, his daughter injuring her arm. After a priest warned him of more threats, he resettled his family in the San Gabriel Valley, blending in among the Asian immigrants.

Ton avoided Vietnamese circles but continued to shuttle to Vietnam, gradually building a new life in Hanoi. He divorced, remarried and had another son. In 2011, his eldest son, Michael, the one he had carried into the evacuating helicopter, returned to Vietnam and now works closely with his father. An ongoing project is to bring “green” energy technology to Vietnam.

Ton presides over diversifie­d interests from his spacious garden restaurant known for California-style pho and pricy Saigonese meals such as “seven courses of beef.” And now it’s the state-controlled media that salute him. A magazine under the auspices of the Ministry of Planning and Developmen­t recently listed Ton among Vietnam’s top 100 business leaders. Another featured a profile of the “quiet pho Cali peddler” and recounted a story once shrouded in secrecy: how during his early travels he managed to relay messages between two government­s that had no diplomatic relations.

One crucial message, the magazine reported, was delivered toward the end of Vietnam’s 10-year occupation of Cambodia, where it defeated Pol Pot’s murderous forces. The message, Ton recalled, signaled that the U.S. was willing to resume a dialogue if Hanoi agreed to fully withdraw.

Soon after, Ton said, Vietnam announced its withdrawal plan and relations were eventually normalized.

On a recent morning at his restaurant, Ton gestured with his Cuban cigar to new palm trees, transplant­ed, he explained, from the property of a high-ranking government minister who was expanding his home.

Working with people and not against them, he said, is how to get things done.

 ?? European Pressphoto Agency ?? FIREWORKS are part of the celebratio­ns in Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, marking the 40th anniversar­y of the Vietnam War’s end.
European Pressphoto Agency FIREWORKS are part of the celebratio­ns in Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, marking the 40th anniversar­y of the Vietnam War’s end.
 ?? Na Son Nguyen
Associated Press ?? VIETNAMESE veterans gather for a parade in Ho Chi Minh City. The city’s fall on April 30, 1975, marked the end of what Vietnam calls the American War.
Na Son Nguyen Associated Press VIETNAMESE veterans gather for a parade in Ho Chi Minh City. The city’s fall on April 30, 1975, marked the end of what Vietnam calls the American War.

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