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 3 of 5)
Two hundred Huntington High students were on hand to greet Minh, Mrazek and Tiernan when their plane landed at New York's Kennedy International Airport.
Mrazek had arranged for two of his Centerport, New York, neighbors, Gene and Nancy Kinney, to be Minh's foster parents. They took him to orthopedists and neurologists, but his muscles were so atrophied "there was almost nothing left in his legs," Nancy says. When Minh was 16, the Kinneys took him to see the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., pushing him in his new wheelchair and pausing so the boy could study the black granite wall. Minh wondered if his father was among the 58,000 names engraved on it.
"Minh stayed with us for 14 months and eventually ended up in San Jose, California," says Nancy, a physical therapist. "We had a lot of trouble raising him. He was very resistant to school and had no desire to get up in the morning. He wanted dinner at midnight because that's when he'd eaten on the streets in Vietnam." In time, Minh calmed down and settled into a normal routine. "I just grew up," he recalled. Minh, now 37 and a newspaper distributor, still talks regularly on the phone with the Kinneys. He calls them Mom and Dad.
Mrazek, meanwhile, turned his attention to gaining passage of the Amerasian Homecoming Act, which he had authored and sponsored. In the end, he sidestepped normal Congressional procedures and slipped his three-page immigration bill into a 1,194-page appropriations bill, which Congress quickly approved and President Ronald Reagan signed in December 1987. The new law called for bringing Amerasians to the United States as immigrants, not refugees, and granted entry to almost anyone who had the slightest touch of a Western appearance. The Amerasians who had been so despised in Vietnam had a passport—their faces—to a new life, and because they could bring family members with them, they were showered with gifts, money and attention by Vietnamese seeking free passage to America. With the stroke of a pen, the children of dust had become the children of gold.
"It was wild," says Tyler Chau Pritchard, 40, who lives in Rochester, Minnesota, and was part of a 1991 Amerasian emigration from Vietnam. "Suddenly everyone in Vietnam loved us. It was like we were walking on clouds. We were their meal ticket, and people offered a lot of money to Amerasians willing to claim them as mothers and grandparents and siblings."
Counterfeit marriage licenses and birth certificates began appearing on the black market. Bribes for officials who would substitute photographs and otherwise alter documents for "families" applying to leave rippled through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Once the "families" reached the United States and checked into one of 55 transit centers, from Utica, New York, to Orange County, California, the new immigrants would often abandon their Amerasian benefactors and head off on their own.
It wasn't long before unofficial reports began to detail mental-health problems in the Amerasian community. "We were hearing stories about suicides, deep-rooted depression, an inability to adjust to foster homes," says Fred Bemak, a professor at George Mason University who specializes in refugee mental-health issues and was enlisted by the National Institute for Mental Health to determine what had gone wrong. "We'd never seen anything like this with any refugee group."
Many Amerasians did well in their new land, particularly those who had been raised by their Vietnamese mothers, those who had learned English and those who ended up with loving foster or adoptive parents in the United States. But in a 1991-92 survey of 170 Vietnamese Amerasians nationwide, Bemak found that some 14 percent had attempted suicide; 76 percent wanted, at least occasionally, to return to Vietnam. Most were eager to find their fathers, but only 33 percent knew his name.
"Amerasians had 30 years of trauma, and you can't just turn that around in a short period of time or undo what happened to them in Vietnam," says Sandy Dang, a Vietnamese refugee who came to the United States in 1981 and has run an outreach program for Asian youths in Washington, D.C. "Basically they were unwanted children. In Vietnam, they weren't accepted as Vietnamese and in America they weren't considered Americans. They searched for love but usually didn't find it. Of all the immigrants in the United States, the Amerasians, I think, are the group that's had the hardest time finding the American Dream."
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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 (86)
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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
I just recently found out that my father JOE THOMAS, while in the Navy from around 1962 to probably 1964 was stationed in Hong Kong. Lived with a woman and she had a son. I do not know their names or exactly where they lived. If anyone has been looking for their father that were born in this time period and is looking for their father as now I would like to know who the family is. I was told my father was writing to her and then couldnt find her and lost touch later. I believe she may have sent a picture to my dad later. My dad is from Waxahachie, TX. Please let me know if this sounds familiar. Thank you.
Posted by Candace Thomas Keele on February 7,2012 | 11:32 AM
My name in Vietnamese was Huynh Thi Man. I was in a Catholic orphanage until adopted. I know my parents where forced by Vietnamese government to raise my brother (Ha van Doung)as catholics so they could adopt us. If anyone has information on this orphanage or who my parent could possibly be please email me at braxton_audra@comcast.net. Or if they information on this orphanage please email me. I came to the states in 1971. Thank you.
Posted by Audra Braxton on January 29,2012 | 11:23 PM
Hi all. My parents are Amerasian, which makes me an Amerasian. both my parents have never met their fathers. I don't have any information about my mom's dad, but I do have a tiny (probably useless) bit of information about my dad's dad. First, my dad's name is Kiet Nguyen, he was born on April 25 1966. His american dad had a relationship with my grandmother who's name is Xuan Nguyen (club dancer). Prior to having had my dad, my grandmother also have had 4 other children with a different man. Within those 4, there's a set of twins. I think my grandfather's name is "Mike" or "Matt" Galaki or something like that, my grandma has bad pronunciation. I wish I had more information, but my grandmother was forced to destroy all evidence of a relationship with an american soldier in order to save her and her kids lives.
If anyone has any information, please email me at jayemen@yahoo.com
Posted by Mai Nguyen on December 23,2011 | 03:19 PM
I'm posting this for my mother. She was born on April 30, a couple years before the war ended in 1975. She's looking for her father, a man who went by Al. He married her mother at the Green Hotel in Vung Tau, Vietnam. He took my grandmother to Bien Hoa for prenatal care, I believe. On his shoulder was a patch that bore K.L.6. I don't know what the significance is. I do not know his last name, or his rank, just that he wasn't a private. I don't know his terms of service either. He is African American and toured when he was twenty years old. If you have any information, please contact nisadang94@gmail.com. IT is believed that my grandfather hailed from Chicago, Illinois. He knew my grandmother as Kim Pho. If you have any information on DNA tests and how to go about finding my grandfather, please contact me.
Posted by Nisa Dang on December 11,2011 | 05:02 PM
My husband left Vietnam when he was seven. His aunt worked for the United States Embassy and were granted to leave Vietnam. His mother chose to stay behind and he left with three aunts his grandparents and his sister. My husband has no idea who his father is. His mother, who he came to the States about eight years ago, really doesn't say much. I would love for him to know who his father was but where do you start?? It really is a hard situation.
Posted by LORENA NGUYEN on November 9,2011 | 07:43 PM
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