Saturday 31 May 2008

Trip overview

Our trip is over!

Thank you so much for sharing our trip with us. We hope that you've enjoyed our blogging along the way.

We met a lot of great people in the last few months as we traveled from Hanoi to Ha Long Bay to Sapa to Hoi An to Dalat to Phan Thiet. We hope that you've enjoyed meeting some of them too.

We interviewed Duc and we visited the Pagoda Monastery (post 1, 2) in Hanoi. We posted some pictures of Ha Long Bay and Sapa (more). We visited a Black H'Mong school near Sapa (more) - and some other schools (more)in the same region.

We interviewed a bunch of people in Hoi An: Bruce & Elaine, Le Ly Hayslip (more, more and more), Josh Solomon and Karen Leonard. We also had a post on Agent Orange.

We even wrote a post or two about the delicious Vietnamese food.

Thanks also to Vinh, Hung, Le, Cy, Trung, Lan and the many others who made our trip so memorable... So memorable, in fact, that we'll be back in Vietnam - soon! How soon? By the end of June.

We have a new project and are rushing to finalize the details, and the requisite fund-raising. We'll have a new post up soon with more details. You might be able to help...

More soon.

Monday 19 May 2008

Agent Orange, Apocalypse Still

As a result of her high profile helping the people of Vietnam, Le Ly Hayslip of Global Village Foundation often receives letters from Vietnamese families asking for help. She recently received one such letter from a husband and wife with two twenty-eight year old sons who suffer from the effects of Agent Orange. The family has at least four letters from different doctors confirming that Agent Orange caused the genetic problems.

The father worked for the American military during the Vietnam War, running missions searching for Viet Cong after the Americans defoliated a forest by dumping Agent Orange from the air. The father still has his official papers from the US military.

Given our interest in Agent Orange, Le Ly arranged for us to visit the family at their home in a remote village near Hoi An. After a 3 hour drive, and a one-hour walk through the rice paddies under the hot Vietnamese sun, we interviewed the parents and met their sons.

Firstly, for some background about Agent Orange in Vietnam, please read "Apocalypse Still" by investigative reporter Robert Dreyfuss in Mother Jones in 2000:

"In the years since the war's end, however, the reality of America's chemical warfare in Vietnam's forests and rice paddies has slowly begun to unfold. Though thousands of American veterans of the war now receive government compensation for illnesses linked to Agent Orange, the United States has yet to accept responsibility for the devastating effects of its campaign on Vietnam. Millions, perhaps tens of millions of Vietnamese, combatants and civilians alike, were showered with Agent Orange, and then lived, worked, and breathed amid the residue of an especially virulent form of dioxin, a byproduct of one of the defoliant's chemical components. This poison, a carcinogen once described as "the most toxic molecule ever synthesized by man," infiltrated the country's water and soil, entering the food chain and accumulating in people's tissues, even passing from mother to child through breast milk. According to Vietnamese estimates, the millions of gallons of Agent Orange that soaked the southern half of Vietnam during the 1960s eventually killed or injured 400,000 people and reportedly contributed to birth defects in 500,000 children. Chillingly, its effects are still being felt, not only among older Vietnamese, whose cancers and other illnesses are often linked to Agent Orange, but among second- and third-generation children of the war, whose twisted bodies and crippled minds bear silent witness to the scourge."
Please read the rest, which Dreyfuss calls "One of my most important pieces. " (see here (pdf) for the version of the article with photos)

The US government is still denying the extent of the problem, their culpability, and their liability. There are some positive-looking moves, however, with the US House Foreign Affairs holding some hearings last week called "Our Forgotten Responsibility: What Can We Do To Help Victims of Agent Orange?"

In our interview, the parents described their ordeal: When the twins were 3 years old, the parents realized that they were having developmental problems and took them to all the major hospitals in Central Vietnam for help. They were told that they only have two options; either take the children to a foreign country to get some medical treatment, or simply take the children home and try to look after them.

The family couldn't afford to travel to seek medical attention, so the twins, now 28 years old, have been at home ever since. The twins can't feed themselves, and they can't talk. Their entire existence is lying on a shared, cane bed which has slits in it so that their bodily waste can fall through to the floor.

The twins appear to be able to communicate with each other via sounds and eye contact, and appeared to know that we were in their room, with one of them appearing to show us his bed sores.




The parents are both 60 years old and aren't sure how long they will live. One of their main concerns, now, is that there isn't anybody to look after their sons when the parents die.

We'd like to thank the family for sharing their story with us.

If you'd like to help the family, please contact us at vietnanon@yahoo.com or contact Global Village directly: info@globalvillagefoundation.org