Changing The World Volume 28 | Page 5

VIETNAM going back to vietnam six years of fund raising and 7823 miles of travel the vietnam veterans of diablo valley head back to vietnam However, this visit would wind up somewhat bittersweet. Our memories of a dimly lit, rundown dive bar with no indoor plumbing and a single surly local bartender, supplanted by the revelation that the DMZ had been remodeled and modernized. Oh sure, you were still allowed to write on the walls with magic marker, but everything that had been there six years earlier had been changed in the “great remodel of 2008.” The new had replaced the old, and we were reminded that our memories of Vietnam of the past were no longer valid today. I t was a dark and stormy night... We find ourselves in Hue, Vietnam. A group of five of us have trekked to a local watering hole known as “The DMZ Bar.” We are midway through our 15 day journey across Vietnam, distributing wheelchairs in partnership with Oakland, California, based East Meets West Foundation, and visiting old haunts. There are 17 of us in our group, but for a few of us the DMZ Bar holds fond memories of an evening we shared there during our last trip to Vietnam, in 2006. It was a night of laughter and tall tales (all prefaced by the words “True story…!”) accompanied by beer and an endless supply of coconut peanuts. It was the night we all wrote our names on the wall with magic marker, some of us leaving messages for other travelers who would grace the same space long after we had left. This message would serve as an underlying theme for many on this trip. For those among us returning to this country for the first time since the late 1960s and early 70s, this trip was the opportunity to experience modern Vietnam and gain understanding of the life that has evolved since the Vietnam war (or “the American war,” depending which side you had been on). Of course, it was wrought with the apprehension and trepidation of not knowing how we might be received, or how we might remember what we had forgotten, intentionally or otherwise. Several in our party set out on side trips to visit locations familiar to them from their time of service in their respective branches of the military (we had Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard represented among us). Again and again, a similar story was repeated “I found the place where our camp / airfield / base had been, but now it’s just a Vietnamese War Memorial / shopping center/ highway, etc…” This is the face of progress in Vietnam. > CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: >>> The Gang assembles outside the White Hotel in District 1 in Ho Chi Minh City, on day one. Many thanks to Ann Tours and Mr. Truc Vole, our excellent interperter and fixer. >>> In Can Tho we provided wheelchairs to swimmers wtih Olympic asp irations. >>> Pictured Left to Right : Jerry Yahiro, John Reese, David Behring and Richard Lambert with one of the many tennis wheelchairs donated to East Meets West’s INSPIRE SPORTS programs throughout Vietnam. w heel ch air fo undatio n.o rg C h a n gi ng the Wor ld 5