The south coast region of Vietnam
around the Mekong delta has experienced successive waves of settlement and colonisation
over the centuries. Founded in the fourth century, its principal city was first
home to the Champa and Khmer peoples before the arrival of the Vietnamese in
the seventeenth century. In the nineteenth century it was colonised by the
French and Spanish, with the French assuming full colonial control after 1862.
It briefly came under joint Japanese-Vichy French control during the Second World
War, before Vietnam achieved its independence, but even then it changed hands
again with the conclusion of the Vietnam’s civil war. Reflecting these changes,
the city’s name has changed over the centuries – known as Baigaur to the
Champa, Prey Nokor to the Khmer (the name by which most Cambodians still refer
to it), and then first Gia Dinh to the Vietnamese, then Saigon, and now, Ho Chi
Minh City.
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Notre Dame Cathedral, Saigon |
Of all these names, that of Saigon
is undoubtedly the most evocative, particularly for Westerners and Vietnam’s
own diaspora communities. For the French, with many of its grand French
colonial era buildings still standing, it is somewhat nostalgically thought of
as Saigon. For Americans, and for the Vietnamese who left Vietnam in the 1970s
and 1980s, it remains, rather more defiantly, Saigon. The end of the Vietnam
War in 1975 saw the city renamed in honour of the reunified country’s Revolutionary leader, Ho Chi Minh (who died of heart failure aged 79 in 1969) – yet even its locals still refer to the downtown area as
Saigon. So the name – Saigon – lives on, equally redolent to differing
emotions, to different people.
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Central Post Office, Saigon |
For me, when I visited in 2009, I
wasn’t sure which name felt the most appropriate. I’m not French and I am not
American, so it doesn’t hold the same associations. The cultural echoes which had
reached me growing up in Britain were mostly derived from Hollywood movies –
such as Platoon, Good Morning Vietnam, and Full Metal Jacket. My
awareness of the Vietnam War was probably more closely associated with the
1960s peace movement – student demonstrations in Europe and the USA; protest
songs, such as The Unknown Soldier by The Doors; Alice’s Restaurant
Masacree by Arlo Guthrie; Give Peace A Chance and Happy Xmas (War
Is Over) by John Lennon and Yoko Ono.
Arriving in Ho Chi Minh City I was
surprised to find myself in a minority. The majority of other Western tourists
were either American or French, and it was interesting to note how their
nationalities clearly determined their sight-seeing priorities. I found there
were lots of Americans visiting the Independence Palace – this building was the
former seat of the President of the Republican Government of South Vietnam,
until it fell with the front gates which were knocked down by three North
Vietnamese Soviet-made T-54 tanks which burst through and roared across the
front lawn on 30 April 1975. A highly symbolic act which signalled
that the North Vietnamese had won the War. The Communist Government
subsequently renamed the building Reunification Palace. An old US Army 'Huey' Helicopter parked on the roof commemorates the aerial bombing of the Palace on
8 April 1975 by a rogue South Vietnamese pilot who was a Viet Cong
sympathiser/defector, but no doubt it serves as a reminder to all Western
visitors, and US tourists in particular, of the iconic photos of “the last
chopper out of Saigon,” airlifting people from the rooftop of
a nearby building. Most evenings there would be busloads of US tourists in my hotel
lobby returning from a day tour to the famously claustrophobic 200 mile complex
of Viet Cong guerrilla warfare tunnels at Cu Chi. Whereas wandering around the areas
close to the Catholic Cathedral, the Central Post Office, City Hall, or the
Municipal Theatre, all buildings built during the French Colonial Era, there
were always more French tourists than any other Westerners. In the grand old Central
Post Office a giant portrait of Uncle Ho’s smiling face looks down on them from on
high and seems to relish this palpable sense of nostalgia which is all that’s left
of the colonial rule he wrested from their grandparents’ grasp. It’s almost as
though he might be whispering with a chuckle to himself –
Liberté, égalité, indépendence.
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Saigon, 30th April 1975 |
I suppose, if there is any British
connection to old Saigon it is a less tangible one. Not so much a building, a
place, or an event – but a person. The writer, Graham Greene made several
visits to Saigon in the early 1950s, acting as a war correspondent for The
Times newspaper. In these years Vietnamese nationalists were fighting the
French, aiming to secure Vietnam’s independence in the wake of the geopolitical
turmoil wrought by the Second World War. The Viet Minh independence movement
was led by Ho Chi Minh, and defeated the French in 1954, establishing the
Communist Democratic Republic of North Vietnam. The war from 1955 to 1975
pitted Ho Chi Minh’s North Vietnamese Army, and the Viet Cong People’s Liberation
Front, based inside South Vietnam, against that of the American-backed South
Vietnamese Republic. The two wars are respectively known as the First and
Second Indo-China Wars. Graham Greene’s novel, The Quiet American (1955), very
evocatively brings to life the events of the First Indo-China War. Written
whilst Greene was staying at The Continental Hotel in Saigon at the time of the
events it describes, the novel is notable for its prescient assessment of the
likely outcomes of increasing American involvement in the conflict.
I bought myself a lovely old
Penguin paperback edition of The Quiet American from a secondhand
bookshop in Tokyo’s Jimbocho area before travelling to Vietnam and read it
during my trip there. The novel’s atmospheric turn of phrase is what is quintessentially
characteristic of Greene’s writing-style:
“I can’t say what made me fall
in love with Vietnam – that a woman’s voice can drug you; that everything is so
intense. The colors, the taste, even the rain. Nothing like the filthy rain in
London. They say whatever you’re looking for, you will find here. They say you
come to Vietnam and you understand a lot in a few minutes, but the rest has got
to be lived. The smell: that’s the first thing that hits you, promising
everything in exchange for your soul. And the heat. Your shirt is straightaway
a rag. You can hardly remember your name, or what you came to escape from. But
at night, there’s a breeze. The river is beautiful. You could be forgiven for
thinking there was no war; that the gunshots were fireworks; that only pleasure
matters. A pipe of opium, or the touch of a girl who might tell you she loves
you. And then, something happens, as you knew it would. And nothing can ever be
the same again.”
However, not being very well versed
in the historical background to, nor even the facts of the struggles which
preceded the Second Indo-China War, meant that I found some of the political
aspects of the novel a little hard to fathom. Two books which I read
subsequently helped to elucidate this lacuna in my knowledge: Brian Crozier’s
South
East Asia in Turmoil (1968), and Milton Osborne’s
Southeast Asia: An
Introductory History (1979).
Crozier argues that the
post-colonial governments of Southeast Asia are themselves essentially
neo-imperialist, even though they professed to be otherwise. Written in the
period just prior to the American military escalation in the failed defence of
South Vietnam it gives an interesting contemporary political critique of events
leading up to that point in time. Hence it can now be read as a history book
turned primary source in some respects. An eye witness to history which can be
cross-examined by hindsight.
Osborne’s book takes a more
detached view. Written a little later, and updated in subsequent editions up to
2016, Osborne gives a very good introduction and overview of what is
essentially a huge topic and a vast region, covering the history of Thailand,
Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. In
light of this fact, Osborne frequently points out the book’s limitations in a
way which is helpful. He also reiterates the main events and the historiography
occasionally which is necessary to keep such a broad survey flowing for the
reader in a connected way. As with any introductory history, it's perhaps best read
as a launch-pad book, or used thereafter as a quick-reference guide. It has a
good bibliography which is arranged by theme/region, a wayfinder for further
avenues of more focussed interest in the history of the region.
Prior to reading either of these
two books much of what I had read previously about Vietnam was what I’d found
in the pages of the
National Geographic Magazine. But the late 1980s
weren’t so very far removed from the events of the Vietnam War, and the Cold
War itself wasn’t yet over, so the perspective which the
National Geographic
articles gave was very much still that of an emotionally engaged USA. For
different reasons the Vietnam War is a deep bruise on America’s national
consciousness which is even today still a long time in healing. The old adage frequently
holds true that “history is written by the victors,” but in the case of Vietnam
the opposite is very much the case in the West. As mentioned above, the US
perspective has deeply inculcated complex responses and representations of the
conflict in Hollywood movies, yet the protest songs and the legacy of the peace
movement have equally swayed our cultural idea of Vietnam and its civil war. In
many senses, in the West at least, the present reality of modern Vietnam is
largely obscured. For me, before I actually visited the country, my
conception of Vietnam remained unconsciously stalled by these familiar tropes
of Huey choppers flying into a blood red tropical sunrise accompanied by a
Rolling Stones’
Paint It Black soundtrack. The hell of jungle warfare,
American soldiers pitted against an unseen ghostly foe who never seems to die.
The distraught, screaming faces of innocent children running down the roads in
terror. The B-52 bombers, ugly black angels of death, senselessly raining down
bombs across the impassive green jungle. Quips about relishing the smell of
napalm in the morning, etc., etc.
Consequently, getting off the plane
I really wasn’t sure what to expect of Vietnam or Ho Chi Minh City. Apart from
a stony-faced immigration official in military uniform who stamped my passport at
the airport, the trappings of Communist Government which seem so all pervasive
in a city such as Beijing appeared to be largely absent here. The Vietnamese
people I met during my stay there all seemed very relaxed, very welcoming and
friendly, even the Vietnamese soldier at the gate of the US Embassy compound
who discouraged me from taking a photo of the place did so with amicable good
cheer. The soldiers guarding public buildings in China certainly aren’t like
that! – I suppose I was expecting the scars of the war still to be fresh, the
distrust of foreigners, especially white Western ones, to be more sharply marked.
Maybe it is for Americans? – I don’t know. Certainly, when it was found out I
wasn’t American or French it was often something which was remarked upon with
surprise, and so may well have exempted me in some senses which I couldn’t
clearly measure. I was an anomaly amongst all these culturally invested
outsiders. Hence perhaps why I kept finding myself returning to these questions
and speculations, ever revolving and ever to be unresolved …
Maybe it’s been easier for the
Vietnamese to move on? – Perhaps what’s past has passed. I soon realised that
far from being a topic to shy away from, the Vietnam War was something to be openly
extolled here. From the Vietnamese point of view it wasn’t a tragedy, and, if
it was viewed in any sense as a sacrifice, ultimately it had been a successful
one. In that sense, “to the winner go the spoils” and the honours too. The
displays and information boards in the Reunification Palace clearly reflected
this fact. Studying the famous series of photographs of the tanks bursting
through the palace gates my preconceptions of the Vietnam War were further
confounded by finding out that the British poet and war correspondent, James
Fenton, was apparently on-board one of the tanks at the time. It was like my
mind was a radio dial struggling to tune itself between two wavelengths ...
“And it’s one, two, three, what are we
fighting for?” … This fact evoked echoes in my memory of photographs of the
American actress, Jane Fonda – “Hanoi Jane” – posing on a North Vietnamese
anti-aircraft gun ...
“And it’s five,
six, seven, open up the pearly gates.” – If the Vietnam War is anything to
Westerners, it is certainly far from straightforward.
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Reunification Palace, 2009 |
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Notre Dame Cathedral |
I tried to equate my experience at
the Reunification Palace with my visiting the Check Point Charlie Museum in
Berlin in early 1993. Here in Ho Chi Minh City the Cold War was weirdly
refracted back on itself, the narrative going in the opposite direction to what
was innately expected, coming from my side of the old Iron, or in this case the
Bamboo Curtain. Yet on Dong Khoi Street there was little to suggest this is a
Communist State. Coco-cola is on sale in the cafes. American Dollars are
acceptable as a dual currency alongside the Vietnamese Dong. Much like India’s
Rupee, the Dong is a closed currency, meaning you can only change it within
Vietnam. Hence the first thing you have to do at the airport is run the gamut
of bureau de change stalls. When I reached this point in the airport terminal I
paused for a moment, standing to one side rummaging in my backpack, trying to
find my money while my fellow passengers went ahead of me. Inadvertently in
doing so I reaped the reward of their eagerness as my advanced guard, because
it meant that by the time most of them had haggled their way down the line and
I got my turn to change my money, the exchange rate had come right down as the
stalls had all been loudly vying with one another to secure the most customers.
Meaning I very happily got more Dong for my Yen. Vietnam is a poor country, for
sure, but the cost of living there is very low. Hence tourism is clearly both a
boost to the nation’s economy and a boon to the thrifty backpacker’s budget.
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Notre Dame Cathedral |
It seemed odd to me though, that
Western tourists could wander around with such ease and were so readily catered
for on their own terms. Smart hotels, boutique shops, artisan cafes, bars
playing Western music. But then, even in the 1970s and 1980s, Communist
Yugoslavia was a popular holiday destination for decadent Westerners too. I’m
not sure how closely the two equate with one another, nor am I sure as to how
well the lives and livelihoods of the average Vietnamese compares to the former
citizens of Yugoslavia or the USSR, or present-day China for that matter. But
these were things I kept finding myself coming back to and wondering about as I
dodged the crazy drivers on their motorbikes and in their mini-vans riding and
driving pell-mell around the streets and traffic islands of old Saigon. I never
did manage to figure out the rules of the road in this city. But one thing was
abundantly clear. Life is lived at a different pace here. Different norms too.
I saw one woman calmly breastfeeding her new-born baby whilst riding pillion and
helmetless on a speeding motorcycle which was weaving through the traffic in a
manner which made my hair stand on end. Crossing the road here is an act of faith. On the busiest streets I learnt that the only way to do it is to step out and maintain a sure steady pace, and somehow the traffic parts around you like water round a rock in a fast flowing river. Believing you are a Jedi Master and that the Force is strong with you is just one means of helping you to hold your nerve!
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The Continental Hotel, 2009 |
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Writing Postcards in the Central Post Office |
I don’t think even now I’ve managed
to reconcile all the questions that this trip set buzzing around inside my
head. It’s hard to say whether or not a different sort of politics might mean
life here would necessarily be lived any differently in its essentials. Ideology
doesn’t always correlate with culture. Had the Communists not won the war would
Vietnam now be more like South Korea? – And who’s to know how it might yet
change in the future? – But perhaps the fact that Vietnam isn’t closed off to
the world, as is North Korea, for instance, is a good thing. Perhaps the fact
that Western tourists – especially those with familial ties intimately linking
them to past conflicts and former colonial connections – can visit and freely
wander the streets of Old Saigon is all to the greater good. The fact they can
talk freely to the locals, as well as observing the realities of their lives
forty years on from the last war, some sixty or seventy years since Vietnam was
a colony, the fact that Westerners are so warmly welcomed might help in reconciling
the past with the present. In lifting the veil of such Western preconceptions
of the past, experiencing Vietnam as it is today – the opportunities such
openness presents may well help to bring peace at last to both personally engaged
outsiders and Vietnamese alike. Past and present divisions aside, in time
bamboo may yet prove to be more flexible and therefore more resilient than iron.
Who is to say? – One thing I do feel sure of though, having seen it for myself,
is that Saigon is a city which endures.
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Hotel Continental & Municipal Theatre |
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Notre Dame Cathedral, Saigon |
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Central Post Office |
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Reunification Palace |
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Central Post Office |
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City Hall |
Also on 'Waymarks'
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"Je ne suis pas un vieux colonial français ..."
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