Vietnam
Pointe du Rạch Bao

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    • Day 135

      Memorial Day - Vietnam Veterans Memorial

      May 29, 2023 in Vietnam ⋅ ☁️ 91 °F

      On this Memorial Day, as we are in Saigon today, it seems so appropriate to post this photo of the Washington DC Vietnam Veterans Memorial with bipartisan participation in honoring those more than 58,000 American who gave their lives or remain missing.

      "Bipartisan group of lawmakers clean Vietnam Veterans Memorial ahead of Memorial Day" -cnn

      In Washington, honoring America’s Vietnam veterans is not a partisan issue. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, including military veterans Reps. Mike Waltz and Seth Moulton, participated in a volunteer cleaning of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial ahead of Memorial Day. Waltz, a combat-decorated Green Beret, has led the effort in hand-washing the memorial in Washington in recent years.

      “It’s good for us as members of Congress to come down here to see these 58,000 names,” Waltz, a Florida Republican, told Jake Tapper on “CNN This Morning.” “This is good for Americans to see us coming together, setting our differences aside and appreciating that freedom isn’t free,” Waltz said.

      Waltz said the effort was important to appreciate Vietnam War veterans.“We learn so much from them about what they went through when veterans weren’t appreciated” because “the country had, for the first time in history, turned against them.”

      “We’ll do this every year and I’ll try to do this every year I’m in Congress,” Waltz pledged.

      Moulton, a Massachusetts Democrat, described participating in the event as “incredibly powerful” and an opportunity “to appreciate what they gave to America, what they gave to all of us, to a country that at the time didn’t even appreciate their sacrifices.”

      Moulton, a Marine, added that the effort serves as “a reminder of all the young men and women who are still out there, standing on the ramparts of freedom around the globe and are counting on us to come together and do the right thing in Washington.”

      Moulton also noted efforts to construct a 9/11 war memorial, which has recently been sited between the Vietnam Veterans and Lincoln Memorials, saying that it would be “a prominent place on the Mall – on the National Mall – for all those we’ve lost so recently.”

      Michigan GOP Rep. Jack Bergman, a retired lieutenant general and a Vietnam veteran, reflected Thursday on his visits to the memorial.

      “Normally I come here alone,” he told Tapper. “Once I get here, I’m never alone because I know who I’m visiting.”

      As Congress remains divided along party lines on raising the debt ceiling ahead of a potential default, the volunteer cleaning helped two congressmen from opposite sides of the aisle realize that they have more in common than they previously thought.

      Reps. Jim Baird, an Indiana Republican, and Mike Thompson, a California Democrat, said they learned they both had been stationed at Georgia’s Fort Moore, were wounded in Vietnam and are married to nurses.

      “We’re here to work together for the American people and maybe that’ll help us get there,” Thompson said.
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    • Day 56

      Saigon, Here We Come

      April 12, 2018 in Vietnam ⋅ ☀️ 35 °C

      After leaving Ben Tre, our boat headed straight for Saigon — aka Ho Chi Minh City — Vietnam’s largest city. Our tour guide, Phiem, had told us that we should gather on the front deck to watch the scene as we passed from the Mekong into the Saigon River. I wasn’t exactly sure what we were supposed to see, but I proceeded to the deck.

      For the past week, as we had cruised along the Mekong, we had seen lots of houses built on the river banks, small to mid-sized vessels, and fish farms. As we headed into the Saigon River, it was as if we had entered a watery highway — there was traffic on the river, and many of the vessels were substantial container ships! The number of vessels that we saw astonishing. As we watched the passing parade, we noticed that even on the large vessels, there was still laundry on the back deck, hammocks in the wheelhouse, and men squatting on the floor as they steered the wheel. Someone spotted a young child playing in a big bucket on the deck of one of the ships. And, as we smiled as the passing parade, we were met with waves and smiles.

      As the afternoon wore on, we started to see the skyline of Saigon, a big metropolitan city. Knowing that our cruise was coming to an end, we exchanged emails addresses with the pals that we had made on the trip — Gail and Dennis, a retired couple from Ottawa who now live in Mexico and travel all over the world (listening to their stories was tremendous fun, and gave me a huge appreciation for how delightful retirement can be); Paola and Steve, a couple from Australia with whom we laughed and laughed (Paola, who has lived all over the world, charmed us with her stories and Steve made us howl with laughter as he talked about biking, motorcycling and moving to meet Paola whom he only knew casually); and John and Debbi (recently retired, living in Toronto, and simply charming). What a lovely week.

      As the sun set over the bridge at the end of town, Arie and I packed our bags, and started to get ready for the very last leg of our sabbatical adventure — two days in Saigon.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Pointe du Rạch Bao, Pointe du Rach Bao

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