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Trinh eventually left Vietnam with his family, went to Australia and became a lawyer. When I first met him, in 1998, he was 28 and working out of his bedroom in a cramped Manila apartment he shared with 16 impoverished Amerasians and other Vietnamese refugees. He was representing, pro bono, 200 or so Amerasians and their family members scattered through the Philippines, negotiating their futures with the U.S. Embassy in Manila. For a decade, the Philippines had been a sort of halfway house where Amerasians could spend six months, learning English and preparing for their new lives in the United States. But U.S. officials had revoked the visas of these 200 for a variety of reasons—fighting, excessive use of alcohol, medical problems, "anti-social" behavior. Vietnam would not take them back and the Manila government maintained that the Philippines was only a transit center. They lived in a stateless twilight zone. But over the course of five years, Trinh managed to get most of the Amerasians and scores of Vietnamese boat people trapped in the Philippines resettled in the United States, Australia, Canada and Norway.
When one of the Amerasians in a Philippine refugee camp committed suicide, Trinh adopted the man's 4-year-old son and helped him become an Australian citizen. "It wasn't until I went to the Philippines that I learned of the Amerasians' issues and ordeals in Vietnam," Trinh told me. "I've always believed that what you sow is what you get. If we are treated fairly and with tenderness, we will grow up being exactly like that. If we are wronged and discriminated against and abused in our childhood, like some of the Amerasians were, chances are we will grow up not being able to think, rationalize or function like other ‘normal' people."
After being defeated at Dien Bien Phu in 1954 and forced to withdraw from Vietnam after nearly a century of colonial rule, France quickly evacuated 25,000 Vietnamese children of French parentage and gave them citizenship. For Amerasians the journey to a new life would be much tougher. About 500 of them left for the United States with Hanoi's approval in 1982 and 1983, but Hanoi and Washington—which did not then have diplomatic relations—could not agree on what to do with the vast majority who remained in Vietnam. Hanoi insisted they were American citizens who were not discriminated against and thus could not be classified as political refugees. Washington, like Hanoi, wanted to use the Amerasians as leverage for settling larger issues between the two countries. Not until 1986, in secret negotiations covering a range of disagreements, did Washington and Hanoi hold direct talks on Amerasians' future.
But by then the lives of an American photographer, a New York congressman, a group of high-school students in Long Island and a 14-year-old Amerasian boy named Le Van Minh had unexpectedly intertwined to change the course of history.
In October 1985, Newsday photographer Audrey Tiernan, age 30, on assignment in Ho Chi Minh City, felt a tug on her pant leg. "I thought it was a dog or a cat," she recalled. "I looked down and there was Minh. It broke my heart." Minh, with long lashes, hazel eyes, a few freckles and a handsome Caucasian face, moved like a crab on all four limbs, likely the result of polio. Minh's mother had thrown him out of the house at the age of 10, and at the end of each day his friend, Thi, would carry the stricken boy on his back to an alleyway where they slept. On that day in 1985, Minh looked up at Tiernan with a hint of a wistful smile and held out a flower he had fashioned from the aluminum wrapper in a pack of cigarettes. The photograph Tiernan snapped of him was printed in newspapers around the world.
The next year, four students from Huntington High School in Long Island saw the picture and decided to do something. They collected 27,000 signatures on a petition to bring Minh to the United States for medical attention.They asked Tiernan and their congressman, Robert Mrazek, for help.
"Funny, isn't it, how something that changed so many lives emanated from the idealism of some high-school kids," says Mrazek, who left Congress in 1992 and now writes historical fiction and nonfiction. Mrazek recalls telling the students that getting Minh to the United States was unlikely. Vietnam and the United States were enemies and had no official contacts; at this low point, immigration had completely stopped. Humanitarian considerations carried no weight. "I went back to Washington feeling very guilty," he says. "The students had come to see me thinking their congressman could change the world and I, in effect, had told them I couldn't." But, he asked himself, would it be possible to find someone at the U.S. State Department and someone from Vietnam's delegation to the United Nations willing to make an exception? Mrazek began making phone calls and writing letters.
Several months later, in May 1987, he flew to Ho Chi Minh City. Mrazek had found a senior Vietnamese official who thought that helping Minh might lead to improved relations with the United States, and the congressman had persuaded a majority of his colleagues in the House of Representatives to press for help with Minh's visa. He could bring the boy home with him. Mrazek had hardly set his feet on Vietnamese soil before the kids were tagging along. They were Amerasians. Some called him "Daddy." They tugged at his hand to direct him to the shuttered church where they lived. Another 60 or 70 Amerasians were camped in the yard. The refrain Mrazek kept hearing was, "I want to go to the land of my father."
"It just hit me," Mrazek says. "We weren't talking about just the one boy. There were lots of these kids, and they were painful reminders to the Vietnamese of the war and all it had cost them. I thought, ‘Well, we're bringing one back. Let's bring them all back, at least the ones who want to come.' "
Related topics: US Military Immigrants Vietnam War Vietnam
Additional Sources
"Vietnamese Amerasian Resettlement: Education, Employment and Family Outcomes in the United States," U.S. GAO report, 1994 (PDF)


Comments
This is such a empowering story. I wish all that have experienced this to have peace and know you are loved by God!
Posted by Candice Taylor on May 16,2009 | 05:20PM
I think that there is not another group whom I have met that I feel more admiration and warmth towards than the Vietnamese people from the Vietnam War era. The strength and patient endurance they show along with their sweetness and gentleness of disposition is truly awe-inspiring.
Posted by Paul Reimers on May 21,2009 | 09:33PM
Beautifully written with eloquence and hope of one of the quiet tragedies of the American military presence in Asia. Children of mixed racial heritage are almost always physically beautiful and mentally bright. David Lamb delivers again.
Posted by Jim Caccavo on May 23,2009 | 11:43AM
Saran Bynum was adopted by my cousin when she was a toddler, she has grown into a very fine young woman and this family is proud to call her one of our own. She was fortunate enough to be adopted into a family that value education. Her Mom is a Doctor who went back to school in her late forties or early fifties after being in a terrible auto accident. Our family has many female doctors we brag about. One of her mother's aunts was President of Allen University in SC. Our great great great grandmother was the first African American to receive a nuring degree. One of our relatives was a medical examiner for Kings County hospital in Brooklyn New York. I'm a firm believer that education is key. And my family is living proof to that. Myself, well, I'm a retired Mental Health Professional, Life is indeed beautiful.
Posted by Joanne Saylor on May 25,2009 | 09:28PM
I am a disabled Vietnam Veteran, I fathered a child in Vietnam in 1971. I have searched for that child for so many years, and in my search, I met Saran Bynum the young lady mentioned in the story. She is just like a daughter to me, and I will always be here for her. I have heard many Vietnam Veterans say that they probably fathered a child in Vietnam, but had no desire to look for them. I ccan't for the life of me understand that, I will do anything to find my child. I fathered a child in Pleiku Vietnam in February 1971. I had a girlfriend that I truly loved there and many more friends. I got shot in pleiku and had to leave the country because of the severity of my wounds. I have been trying for over thirty years to go back to see if I can find anyone that remembers me or my girlfriend and friends. I have been trying to do whatever I can to help any Vietnamese come to this country over the past three or four years. My friend Nguyen Van Trinh who served with me in Pleiku and An Khe will arrive in the US in June of this year, along with his family to resettle in Philadelphia. I feel so good about this because I helped and Trinh and his family deserves the freedom that he helped fight for. If there is any Amerasian out there that needs a fill in father, I'm here for you. I'm an African American, my friends in Pleiku called me Brother T, because I was a brother to all of my friends. My Email; pleiku71@sbcglobal.net
Posted by Larry Taylor on May 26,2009 | 06:16AM
First, I must commend Smithsonian Mag for printing this article. Second, the Amerasian Child is not unqiue to Vietnam; there are Amerasians in Korea, Japan, Vietnam, Thailand and Vietnam;there are Amerasians in any Asian Country where the US had troops male & female) stationed. In most Asian Countries a child identified by father;those with American Fathers are considered American (a sad fact that it took the US so very long to acknowledge). Each of these countries have Amerasian young adults trying to live within a cultures that view them as "foreigners". I was touched by the above article by the father of an Amerisain - you are one of a minority, Sir. I was the director of an international aid and adoption agency for 35 years & worked with several very dedicated people assisting Amerasians - our agency placed Amerasian Children from these countries with adoptive families. I have assisted some Amerasians searching for their birth mothers;the next step in their longing is to know who their father is .... a very difficult step .... many moms do not have, or will not disclose, the identity of the birth father. We've had some successes, but few and far between. I would like to help develop a group for fathers - but am not certain just how it should be formulated. I am open to discussion! My husband & I have five Amerasian Children (now young adults) & would like to locate their fathers. I located two - but they were not willing to have contact. This is a subject of interest to many people - the Amerasian, the birth mothers, the birth fathers, and those who have dedicated their lives to aiding the Amerasians. The past wuould have been so much easier for the Amerasians if only the US had followed France's example in granting French Citizenship to any Amerasian stating their father was French. I am open to contact with anyone interested in this subject.
Posted by Cheryl Livingston Markson on May 26,2009 | 06:16PM
Le Van Minh graceful mien brought me to tears. Despite his life’s staggering hardships, he states he harbors anger towards no one. Defying perpetuation of the harrowing discrimination he experienced, Minh’s lack of rancor reminded me to put my own pettiness into perspective and seek paths of forgiveness in a seemingly merciless world.
Sincerely,
Nicole Gruter
Posted by NIcole Gruter on May 29,2009 | 01:43PM
A very good look at the truth. Being in Saigon at the end of the war in 1975 I know and experienced the fear that is described in the article. As someone on one of the evacuation flights from Saigon in 1975 and someone who participated in OPERATION BABYLIFT in March of that year, this article has personal interest to me.
Posted by Steven Johnson on June 1,2009 | 10:59AM
Hi David,
Nice article,sad I never had an chance to meet you,when you went to Vietnam. Well the sad odessy of the amerasians will proberly continue forever,as long the USG don't want to accept the remain ones,there are left in Vietnam. For us that had been helping amerasians since early 90'ties,looking for their father,we can only wonder why after so many years,those created the children,still don't want to share the burden,it takes so little money to bring the remain Amerasians back to USA,and close that sad chapter in history.
But for me and other people involved in this issue,we will continue to fight for the Amerasians in the best way we can.
I hope my work had done an little bit in the big picture.
Sincerely
Brian Hjort
www.fatherfounded.org
Helping Amerasians to look for their American fathers
Posted by Brian Hjort on June 9,2009 | 06:24PM
My stepfather Bert always spoke sadly of the daughter he'd lost in the aftermath of the war. I've never seen him as happy as the day she made contact with him through the Red Cross. They were reunited after more than 30 years apart, and in 2001 she immigrated with his three grandchildren to enjoy the better life and opportunities available in the United States. Today through much hard work and perseverance she is a successful small business owner - the American Dream come true for another generation. This article drove home again how our family's happy-ending story is truly a miracle.
Posted by Ed K. on June 26,2009 | 02:13PM
I am so sad to read this article. Innocent babies paying the price of war. Now they are adults but where was the opportunity? It is a miracle that any of these victim's succeeded in life. May God forgive us.
Posted by Dubuque on July 2,2009 | 08:41PM
My wife is from Siagon Vietnam and was brought over during the evacuation described in this article. If there is anyone out there who can help her find her real parents you would truelly be a miracle worker. Her birth certificate showed her name as Thuy Ahn Nguyen. The orphange was called Sacred Heart in the town of Gia'Dinh. She was born in 1972 and has more Asian features. We don't know if she had an american father or not. If you think you can help in any way please contact me at mikeskikas@sbcglobal.net
Posted by mike skikas on July 26,2009 | 03:59PM
This is a long shot but I don't know where to turn.
My name is Sharina Nixon. I was just informed (yesterday) about a sister of mine who my father fathered during the Vietnam war. I do not know her last name but I was told my father named her Tessie. She has to be in her early 40s and is Vietnamese and Black. I HAVE TO FIND HER. Does anyone know where I can find or look for her?
Desperate,
Sharina Nixon
sharina_g@yahoo.com
Posted by Sharina on November 9,2009 | 10:55AM
I am almost certain that I fathered a child in Phan Rang, Vietnam in Aug of 1970 to a Vietnam girl that I cannot remember her name.
I don't know if you can help me or not, but I had to ask someone.
Posted by jerry blagg on November 13,2009 | 12:29PM