Children of the Vietnam War
Born overseas to Vietnamese mothers and U.S. servicemen, Amerasians brought hard-won resilience to their lives in America
- By David Lamb
- Photographs by Catherine Karnow
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
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.' "
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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 (91)
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My mother is Amerasian. Isare there organizatios/resources out there that can help her locate herfather? We've lived in the states for 23 years. This would help her piece together ther past and identity. Thank you...
Posted by dieu le on May 8,2013 | 01:28 AM
this was an amazing article. i thought i was going to cry... thats how sad it was
Posted by on April 30,2013 | 04:34 PM
Hi..my father served in vietnam and has a child born there. His name is Haywood Clark. Im looking for my sister. My father Haywood died in 1986 in the US Washington DC. I want to find my sister and unite with her along with our other siblings.
Posted by Kimberly Clark Webb on April 24,2013 | 12:38 PM
In December 1972 a baby girl was born to Hong Thi Chau. She was born in my brothers bed on the base in Da Nang. My brother went missing in action in January 1973. I need to find her and reunite her with her mother, my brothers wife Thank you, Linda
Posted by Linda Moreau on March 13,2013 | 12:57 AM
I was in Vietnam in 1969-1970, I was stationed in Ling Bien during that time, a young lady was pregnant with my child when my term was up, I never heard anything from her from that point on. I really did love her and our expectant child. I would love to find out if she or my child is still living. The village was just outside the gate of the 117th aviation.
Posted by Sam Scarbough on March 10,2013 | 12:43 PM
My mom is mix with white ii been trying for a couple of years to help her find her father that was a sargent in vietname war n e help or suggestions
Posted by jenny huynh on February 11,2013 | 12:10 PM
I am a African American, Vietnam vet who served in 1970. I am a firm believer that I left at least one child in Vietnam. This article moved this old man to tears knowing what the person(s)I left behind must have gone through. Seeing what the Vietnamese people endured during that war amazed me. The war was a day to day life for them. After it was over, it must have been a living hell that continued for decades. It's a beautiful country with beautiful people. Thanks to all who made this article.
Posted by Daryl on December 21,2012 | 07:06 PM
Great article! My mother is Vietnamese and came to the USA in Operation Baby Lift, and my father is African American. I was born in 1988 in the USA. It bothers me to know that people of a similar background as me went through these issues in Vietnam, the USA and other countries, but I'm glad that I read this, it was very informative. Many thanks!
Posted by KP on September 28,2012 | 09:32 AM
while my brother George cornelious smith was in the army, He met a young ladies, who was from china, during the vietnam war,where he fathered two sons, eric and rafael. we lost contact with their grandmother about them. They are grown now, and they have a grandmother who is 84 years old, that think about them all the time latel. we are looking for any information concerning them. Mother name was maling.
Posted by evon smith on July 25,2012 | 08:12 PM
My brother, Steve Davies, fathered a baby girl in either June or July, 1969. He was stationed in a town called Pleiku or Pleiko in the central Highlands of Vietnam. He worked and lived on the air force base and worked in avionics at the helicopter base. He fell in love with a Vietnamese woman who was also part French. She did not speak English. My brother remembers her name, probably the last, as "Huong" or "Huwong". She called him "Davey", because of his last name. He was there for the birth of their baby girl and wanted to marry this woman. But when he went home to the U.S. (he was in Vietnam for 19 months), his father insisted he cut all ties. He was broken hearted, but followed his father. Now Steve is in his early 60's, is married, but always wonders what happened to his daughter. If anyone knows anything, or if there is a registry, please contact me. Thank you for any help or advice you can give us. Carol Renard Florida
Posted by Carol Renard on June 3,2012 | 12:18 PM
I am looking for a girl that worked in pleiku in 1972. her name is Phu Nguyen. she worked in the messhall in camp holloway. and we had a place in pleiku. but she moved to the Bien Ho area where her mom left her a house. I was a security Gaurd in camp holloway 1971-1972. Phu where are you?????????
Posted by george delano Dennie on May 27,2012 | 03:05 AM
My father speaks of a child he fathered in Vietnam I would like to locate this child and bring him or her to meet the father they never knew my father was a marine his name is Domingo L. Medina thank you very much
Posted by Rita Medina on April 8,2012 | 12:10 AM
My sister and I were probably two of the lucky few. We were both born in Vietnam during the 60's to an American father and a Vietnamese mother. My dad married my mom and took us back to the US with him. Reading this story makes me realize how lucky we were to have our parents.
So many orphans in a war some 40+ years ago, still not knowing what has become of either both parents or at least one is I'm sure the most difficult thing anybody can deal with. May God bless you all, and I hope one day you can find peace.
Posted by Renee Wood on March 23,2012 | 06:28 PM
Such a touching story. My husband was 18 months in Vietnam - before I married him. I doubt he fathered any children there as he would have told me.
Posted by Moiraz on February 26,2012 | 11:53 PM
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