The Hanoitimes - A piece of shrapnel sliced Jerry Maroney’s right leg. A bullet pierced Peter Holt’s neck. Les Newell took a shot in the rump.
These old American soldiers recovered from the physical scars of combat long ago. But last week, they visited a place where people still have fresh wounds from the American War, which ended nearly 35 years ago.
They travelled to
VVMF sponsors Project RENEW, a non-profit organisation that helps Quang Tri residents like Pham Quy Tuan, 41, whose left hand and right arm were blown off by a leftover American projectile he found in a rice paddy four months ago.
"When I realised I’d lost my hands, all I could think about was how much I love my wife and kids, and how I would become a big burden to them," said Tuan, who also suffered severe burns and remains in chronic pain.
The VVMF delegation was led by Barry R McCaffrey, a retired four-star general who served as President Clinton’s drug czar and now appears as a military analyst on NBC news. Also participating were family members of fallen soldiers and
Thomas J Whitehouse of
Sam Metters, who has three Bronze Stars and a Purple Heart, hoped to find a school that he and several Army comrades designed for Vietnamese orphans while they were stationed near Sai Gon.
Judy Campbell of
"He was a medic, and medics save lives," said Judy Campbell, who was 17 when her brother died. "That’s what Keith did, at the cost of his own."
The delegation began its week-long tour of
And they were heartened by the warm welcome they received from the people, including those in a Quang Tri district where they dedicated a new elementary school funded by VVMF.
"I feel like a rock star," said Maroney, 62, a former Marine who recently retired from his job as a detective in
Maroney was apprehensive before he arrived. "I hated these guys. They killed my friends. We killed them. It was war."
For the Vietnamese in Quang Tri, the war hasn’t completely ended.
"It’s still a daily part of their lives," said Scruggs, who decided to start Project RENEW during a visit to
According to VVMF, more than 350,000 tonnes of landmines and explosives remain scattered across the country, much of them in Quang Tri, near the former Demilitarised Zone, or DMZ, which once divided northern
Since 1975, more than 100,000 Vietnamese people have been killed or injured by landmines or unexploded ordinance, more than 7,000 of them in Quang Tri, according to the Vietnamese government.
Project RENEW focuses on three districts in the province, where it educates people about the dangers of landmines and clears the land of explosives. It also assists the injured, providing them with artificial limbs, small loans and job training.
The programme operates a hotline and has trained two teams to respond quickly when residents spot explosives.
Last Thursday, the delegation watched a team detonate explosives that had been found near two homes in the Cam Lo District, including a cluster bomb and a grenade launcher in the yard of 75-year-old Nguyen Thi Yen Thi. Thi was relieved to see them go.
"You never know when those things might explode," said Thi, who has found a half dozen explosives in her yard over the years.
One of them spontaneously combusted on a hot summer day; another blew up when someone was burning trash in her yard. The others were removed without incident.
Two of Thi’s nephews have been injured by landmines, a third was killed.
Many victims are children who play with the explosives, unaware of the danger. But many are adults like Tuan, who, before his injury, made a living collecting scrap metal and selling it to junk dealers.
When he discovered the projectile in the rice paddy, Tuan took it home and decided to remove a piece of copper wrapped around the device.
When the bomb exploded, his wife was out collecting trash, which she recycles for a living. His 11-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter found him in the backyard.
When his wounds are more fully healed, the Project RENEW staff will see if he can be fitted with a pair of prosthetic limbs.
"Nothing would make me happier than a pair of artificial hands," Tuan said. "I’m helpless."
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