I’ve
been watching Ken Burns and Lynn Novick’s 10-part film about Vietnam on PBS. It
is unsatisfying, and not only because the experience as we lived it fifty years
ago was a nightmare.
Perhaps
it is because so many things in our country, including this documentary, are
paid for by people like the Koch brothers and the Bank of America, and that has
influenced the telling of the story.
What
is the old saying? The winners write history?
Perhaps
because it tells a story that is not my story, or your story. It tells the stories
of a few people, and I think Burns and Novick mean to illustrate the whole war
in the stories of these few, but I don’t think they succeed.
Do
not watch it if you don’t like pictures of dead bodies. The documentary shows
piles of dead Vietnamese and Americans, on the ground, on tanks, on armored
personnel carriers, carried in bags and in tarps, carried on stretchers or
without stretchers or on soldiers’ backs; scattered in fields and in puddles,
lying alongside paths in the jungle. I have never seen so many corpses in my
life. Broken bloody dolls, formerly human beings and pieces of human beings.
The pictures bring home the brutality of that war.
Of
all wars.
And
those are the guys whose bodies weren’t blown into a pink mist. Of whom there
was something left to send home.
Oh,
yeah. Home.
I
started college in 1965 at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, the most conservative of
the California state schools. How conservative was it? In 1968-9, when San
Francisco State was shut down for five months by the strike of the Black
Students and the Third World Liberation Front, Cal Poly was considered the
safest place for then Governor Ronald Reagan and the UC Board of Regents to
meet. The first I knew of it was when I saw a policeman wearing a baby blue
helmet and carrying one of those yard-long truncheons.
He
looked bizarrely out of place to me. Such force was overkill at Cal Poly –
sure, there was a small crowd of protesters, twenty or thirty maybe, but there
was another group of students that presented Governor Reagan and the Regents with
a welcome letter. They expressed their thanks and appreciation for the fine job
the Governor and the Regents were doing. There was a nice article about it in
the school newspaper afterward.
In
those years the draft and the draft lottery were on everybody’s mind. You
cannot exaggerate how large it loomed in
our lives. A young man never knew when he might be drafted and sent off
to die, so many young men lived in fear until they got a low lottery number, or
a deferment, or failed their physical, or joined some other branch of the
service where they thought they’d have more control of their destiny than they
would in the Army infantry.
A
couple of the draftees I knew came back from Vietnam broken, angry, and bitter,
unable to make eye contact. To them I suppose I was this airhead girl who had
no idea, and looking at those piles of corpses I suppose they were exactly
right.
Some
vets drank. Some came home addicted to heroin. Some smoked dope, which they’d
started smoking in Vietnam. Grass was easy to get in Vietnam. Rick said it came
aboard his ship with the mail. The postmaster was a popular guy.
My
husband Rick was a blue water Navy veteran of Vietnam. He was on Yankee
Station, North SARS (Search and Rescue) in the Tonkin Gulf, on the USS King.
Their job was to pick up pilots who came out of North Vietnam and ditched in
the Gulf.
Rick
always had a soft spot for John McCain because McCain was shot down and taken
prisoner while the King was on station. McCain never had a chance of getting
out to the Tonkin Gulf, but his plane’s distress signal was heard, so they knew
on the King that he’d gone down.
I
feel like I’ve lived with the Vietnam war all my adult life. I didn’t go to
war, but I’ve lived with and around guys who did, and their whole lives and in
many cases their deaths were deeply affected by the war.
People
are still dying because they were in Vietnam.
I
guess I’ll keep watching the Vietnam documentary, to see where it goes, but if
it is meant to provide healing to our sad old country, I am not feeling it. I
confess that I did have hopes. Oh well. Not that many quick fixes in this life,
are there?
Blessings
on you.
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