The Arizona Republic

Vietnamese know what Afghans face

Fall of Kabul brings back memories for refugees

- Jeff Gammage

PHILADELPH­IA – Vicky Ung wept as she watched Afghanista­n fall.

Not because it was her homeland. She cried because, having fled a collapsing South Vietnam nearly 50 years ago, she knew exactly what the Afghan people felt. Shock at the enemy’s rapid advance. Disbelief that their government was crumbling. Terror of being left behind.

And for those who managed to get out, a disorienta­ting flight into the unknown and tilting arrival in a new land where everything is different.

Does Afghanista­n constitute another Vietnam for the United States? Is Kabul the same as Saigon? Was last month’s U.S. military airlift the modern replay of a desperate, decades-old evacuation?

Let the politician­s argue, said Ung, a retired 70-year-old dress designer who lives in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvan­ia.

She only knows that as the communists pressed into Saigon in late April 1975, she was 23, with a 4-year-old daughter, and they escaped aboard one of the last planes out of the country.

If she could reach out and hug the people of Afghanista­n, she would do it. For now, as evacuated Afghans land at Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport, she wants to do all she can to help.

Ung is collecting clothes and toys to donate, clearing bedrooms in her house to offer an Afghan family a place to stay, and talking to other Vietnamese about launching a formal assistance effort.

“I understand,” Ung said, “that war has no mercy.”

The 5,862 evacuees who have come to Philadelph­ia since Aug. 28 are traveling from first-stop, emergency processing centers in countries like Germany, Spain, Qatar, and Uzbekistan.

From the airport they’re bused to

Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in New Jersey, which could house as many as 10,000 evacuees, just as Fort Indiantown Gap once sheltered Vietnamese refugees in Pennsylvan­ia.

“We cry along with them,” said Theresa Tran, 57, of Montgomery Township, Pennsylvan­ia. “My Vietnamese friends, it reminds us of what we went through, and we feel really bad for the people.”

These last weeks, she and others say, memories have flooded back.

Tran was 11 when South Vietnam ceased to exist. She and her family watched Saigon fall from a ship offshore.

Her father secured places on a boat with 250 others. Everyone was staring at the coast, waiting to see if some lastminute miracle might alter the war’s outcome.

“Once South Vietnam surrendere­d,” she said, “my father told the captain to go ahead and leave. We knew it was the end.”

After two days at sea, Tran and the others were picked up by a passing cargo ship.

They were ferried a thousand miles to the Philippine­s, then to Wake Island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Eventually they were brought to Fort Indiantown Gap, and later transferre­d to a sponsor.

She fears for the Afghans who worked for the Americans and were left behind, because she knows what happened to members of her family who served the South – imprisonme­nt and torture.

“They don’t know what’s waiting for them. But we Vietnamese, we know,” said Luong Nguyen, 67, a retired Dow scientist who recently moved from Pennsylvan­ia to Florida.

He and his friends discuss the Taliban takeover, the ways it’s similar and dissimilar to the North Vietnamese victory. The luck and chance that saw some escape and others trapped.

Every April 30 – the anniversar­y of Saigon’s fall – he and his friends take stock and ask: Why are we here? Think of all the exact circumstan­ces that had to occur to propel them out of their homeland and to safety in the United States.

The Afghans who settle here, he said, will be asking themselves the same question.

On the night of April 29, 1975, Nguyen, a 21-year-old college student, was pulled aboard a ship by his navy officer brother.

Every man was needed for the final battle, and forces were gathering offshore. The South Vietnamese government was about to drop a special bomb that would drive back the communists.

Of course, there was no bomb. His brother tricked him, Nguyen said, knowing he would be in danger as a college student. When Saigon fell the next day, the ship simply sailed away.

“They leave their country emptyhande­d,” Nguyen said of the Afghans, but he has confidence in their future. “With their mind, their strength, their eagerness to continue, they will do wonderfull­y.”

Philadelph­ia is home to the region’s largest concentrat­ion of Vietnamese, about 14,500 people, many with war-era roots. The Afghan population is small, about 700.

It’s uncertain how many evacuees may eventually settle here, as federal and local humanitari­an efforts have been defined by fluidity.

Afghanista­n was not supposed to collapse. Nor was U.S.-backed South Vietnam – at least not so fast.

The desperatio­n of thousands of Vietnamese at the U.S. Embassy gates would be mirrored by Afghans at walls of the Kabul airport.

“You have to live through it to know the pain of losing your country,” said Ung, who prays every day for the Afghan people. “We have to be kind to each other. We have to have open arms.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ, PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER /TNS ?? Vicky Ung barely made it out of Saigon as the North Vietnamese captured the city in 1975, ending the Vietnam War. Here she holds a map she bought at the military commissary for $1 back in the 1970s.
ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ, PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER /TNS Vicky Ung barely made it out of Saigon as the North Vietnamese captured the city in 1975, ending the Vietnam War. Here she holds a map she bought at the military commissary for $1 back in the 1970s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States