The American War and a Uniquely Vietnamese Religion
10-Apr-2012
The Cu Chi Tunnels
The Road to Cu Chi
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Vietnam |
After two posts in which That War figured not all, this one returns to it with a vengeance.
We set off early towards Cu Chi some 50 km north of Saigon. Ten minutes from our hotel we passed an unremarkable crossroads with a small
shrine on one corner commemorating Thích Quàng Đúc, the Buddhist monk who set himself on fire here on the 11th of June 1963. We first encountered Thích Quàng Đúc at his monastery in Hue where you can find the full story.
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The shrine of Thich Quang Duc (far corner of the road)
Ho Chi Minh City |
We drove north along a flat, straight road across land that had been forest before Agent Orange was sprayed all over it. The awful effects
of that action we had seen at the War Souvenir Museum in Ho Chi Minh City.
Trang told us more stories of the trials and tribulation of his family through the long years of war. They were not dramas, there were no
heroes or villains, they were just stories of how people’s lives are buffeted
and blown off-course by the storms of war. I will not reproduced them here,
they are Trang’s stories and I feel he has a right to tell them to whoever he
wishes but I should not pass them on second hand and mutated by the fallibility
of memory.
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Roadside scene north of Ho Chi Minh City |
We are Introduced to the Tunnels
The Cu Chi Tunnels are a major tourist attraction, so we arrived at a car park that already contained several buses. Trang paid our entrance fees and we walked through a long
concrete underpass and emerged in a wooded area.
During the war, Cu Chi, mid-way between Saigon and the Cambodian border, saw intense Viet Cong activity among the large number of
American bases.
For protection, the Viet Cong built an extensive network of tunnels, popping up to ambush the Americans whenever they could. The
Americans, understandably, devoted considerable effort to smoking the Viet Cong out
from their hiding places (often quite literally).
‘Can you see the tunnel?’ Trang asked as we stood beneath a clump of trees on a patch of leaf strewn grass. We could see nothing suspicious,
but then a soldier arrived. Moving Lynne aside he brushed some leaves from where she had been standing to reveal a wooden
hatch. He dropped down into the tunnel, lowered the hatch over his head and disappeared.
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Into the tunnel, Cu Chi |
The photograph above could almost be of a model, rather like the plaster dog’s backsides people put on their lawns to make it look as if a
Jack Russell is disappearing into a hole it has dug. But this is not a model,
it is a real person, the upper half is attached to a lower part and he really
did slide through that tiny entrance.
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Disappearing into the hole, Ch Chi |
A continual game of cat and mouse had been played. The Americans liked to drop grenades into the tunnel entrances so the Viet Cong
provided them with fake entrances. The Americans used dogs to detect the real
entrances, so the VC put aniseed round the fake entrances, and so it went on.
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Lynne by a real hole/fake hole/smoke hole for a distant kitchen?
Cu Chi |
We were shown round the easily accessible parts, visiting underground kitchens, hospitals...
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Hospital, Cu Chi tunnels |
...andd command centres.
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Trang takes command, Cu Chi tunnels |
Making Sandals that Go the Wrong Way
We saw a man making sandals from used
tyres....
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Making sandals from used tyres |
...putting the ‘heals’ at the front and the ‘toes’ at the back to confuse attempts at tracking.
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Sandals with 'toes' at the back and 'heal' at the front |
Conditions in the Tunnels
We drank the ‘tea’ they brewed from jungle plants and ate the boiled sago which was their staple diet. It was not unpalatable and a
good source of carbohydrate, but I am sure I would quickly have tired of it.
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Tea and sago at the Ch Chi tunnels |
At one point we were invited to crawl along some the tunnels themselves. Of course they had been cleaned and swept so that we did not have
to share them with the spiders and snakes the VC encountered, and they had been
enlarged to accommodate our oversized western arses. The Americans formed a
‘tunnel rats’ unit, but in the confined spaces the larger Americans were always
at a disadvantage against their smaller, slighter adversaries.
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In the (enlarged) Cu Chi tunnels |
It was all good fun in a Boy’s
Own sort of way, and it was easy to see the VC as Robin Hood figures and the Americans as the Sheriff of
Nottingham’s men, but there were some sections that made me feel uneasy.
Whay Happens to the Enemy
It started with a destroyed tank. A group of tourist were
laughing and having their photograph taken beside it, then it was our turn and
Trang took the picture below. As he did so I wondered about the tank behind us:
had it been brought here, or was this where it had been destroyed? What about
the men inside? Were tourist snapping photos and laughing in the place where
young American conscripts had died?
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Destroyed tank, Cu Chi tunnels |
And then there were the booby traps. Bombs and mines are bad enough but there seemed to be something vicious and personal about the
improvised traps on display. A soldier kicks open the door of a house and a
plank swings down at him bristling with barbed iron spikes. It is easy to stop:
he takes his rifle in both hands and holds it out in front of him. But there is
an extra piece hinged on the bottom bearing another barbed skewer which then
swings upwards into the soldier’s groin. I have difficulty understanding how anybody
who could design or deploy something that would do that to another human being.
They showed off a line of booby traps buried in the ground, all of them based on the same barbed spikes. A wooden box with a spike in the
bottom and four more angled down from the top corners was the simplest and in
some ways the nastiest. Slip into that and as you cope with the pain from your impaled foot, you slowly realise
that you are going to be trapped there for some time, possibly the rest of your
life, and even if your comrades can get you out, it would probably be with one
leg fewer than when you stumbled in.
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Examples of booby traps Cu Chi tunnels |
I have no difficulty coping with the Un-Hollywoodlike idea that the Americans are the baddies and the Viet Cong the goodies, what I cannot
comprehend is how you can dehumanize your foe enough to do that to them.
The Cao Dai Great Temple
We left Cu Chi in a thoughtful frame of mind and drove a further 40 km north, parallel to the Cambodian border and into Tay Ninh Province.
The Cao Dai religion was founded in the Mekong Delta in the 1920s when a superior spirit called Cao Dai (literally ‘High Place’) made
himself known to a medium. Cao Dai had previously visited earth as Lao-tzu,
Jesus Christ, Mohammed, Moses, Sakyamuni and Confucius (though not necessarily
in that order) but was displeased by the outcome and had since being working
through a series of saints – an eclectic group including Joan of Arc, Louis
Pasteur and Winston Churchill. Emphasising prayer, veneration of ancestors,
non-violence and vegetarianism, Cao Dai is a pick ‘n’ mix of major world
religions and seems largely benign if distinctly odd. The estimated 2 or 3
million adherents mostly live in the Mekong Delta and in Tay Ninh where they
have their headquarters.
We arrived at the Cathedral of the Holy See – the leader of Cao Dai likes to style himself ‘pope’ – in time for the 12 o’clock service. Odd
or not, large sums of money have been made available to build a Cathedral midway in style between a church and
a Buddhist temple, though the decoration - reminiscent of the Vinh Trang pagoda - is typically southern Vietnamese.
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Approaching the Cao Dai cathedral, Tay Ninh |
Along with many other tourists we were crammed onto a balcony. At midday the worshippers processed in, the leaders in brightly
coloured robes, the rank and file in white.
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The assembled faithful, Cao Dai Cathedral Tay Ninh |
They settled themselves down and chanted. For maybe ten minutes the chanting continued unchanged, then there was a minor, though
well-choreographed change in seating plan and the chanting resumed.
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Endless chanting, Cao Dai cathedral, Tay Ninh |
Fifteen minutes later we realised nothing else was going to happen and the repetitive one-line chant was beginning to grate, so we made our exit. We were far from
the first to leave.
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Inside the Cao Dai cathedral, Tay Ninh |
Lunch and Back to Ho Chi Minh City
Lunch was at a tourist feeding station; Trang apologised but there is nowhere else suitable locally. There was nothing wrong with the food,
and there was plenty of it, but it was bland and designed to offend no one.
The Site of a Famous and Disturbing Photograph
Driving back towards the city down a long straight road through flat farmland we passed several smaller Cao Dai churches, one of them
in the village of Trang Bang. In June 1972 the North Vietnamese took the
village and a group of civilians and South Vietnamese soldiers who had been
sheltering in the church made a run for the South Vietnamese lines just outside
the village. Mistaking them for Viet Cong fighters the South Vietnamese air
force napalmed them.
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Cao Dai church, Trang Bang |
Nine year old Phan Thị Kim Phúc tore off her burning clothes and ran down the road naked and screaming. Nick Ut’s photograph of this event
shocked the world (it can be seen here). My photograph shows where it happened,
though the road has been rebuilt and widened since 1972. It is difficult to
believe that such terrible events could have taken place in such a banal setting.
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A banal setting for terrible events, Trang Bang |
After taking the photograph Huỳnh Công (Nick) Ut went to the assistance of Kim Phuc taking her and other injured children to hospital. Depite not being
expected to survive, Kim did recover and went on to study at university in Ho
Chi Minh City and then Havana. She married in 1992 and whilst on honeymoon she
and her husband sought political asylum in Canada. They now live in Ontario and
have two children. Kim is a UNESCO goodwill ambassador and has set up the Kim
Phuc Foundation which aids child war victims. Ut was 21 when he took the
picture having worked for the Associated Press since he was 15. Evacuated when
South Vietnam fell, he is still an Associated Press photographer but is now an
American citizen and lives in Los Angeles. He and Kim Phuc remain in contact.
Back in the city we said goodbye to Trang and our driver. We had spent a lot of time together over the previous week and had got to know
Trang well. It felt like we were leaving a friend.
11-Apr-2012
Saying Farewell to Ho Chi Minh City and Vietnam
Weasel Coffee
The next day was our last in Vietnam. We did some shopping, walking up to the Ben Thanh market where we bought various presents, some tea
to take home, and some ‘weasel coffee’, the beans having passed through the
digestive tract of an Asian palm civet (not a weasel) before processing. This
is the ‘most expensive coffee in the world’ selling, according to the ever
reliable Wikipedia for US$750 a kilo. Ours was far cheaper, suggesting either it
was from intensively farmed civets who are force fed coffee beans, or, more
likely, a chemically simulated ‘weasel coffee’ - in other words, as genuine as my Ray-Bans. Civet
Farms, I learned later, raise serious animal welfare concerns so I hope it was a
fake. The Speciality Coffee Association of America describes weasel coffee as a
gimmick and says ‘…it just tastes bad’. It may well be a gimmick but it has, we
were to discover, a powerful almost rank flavour, which suits my taste better
than the insipid coffees Americans seem to prefer.
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Where to buy weasel coffee, Ben Thanh market, Ho Chi Minh City |
Sri Mariamman Hindu Temple
Near the market is the Sri Mariamman Hindu Temple, one of several serving Ho Chi Minh’s small Hindu community. The gopura may be diminutive by
Indian standards, but it stands out in Vietnam.
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Sri Mariamman Hindu Temple, Ho Chi Minh City |
Removing our shoes, we walked round the inside, and watched a steady trickle of worshippers coming and going.
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Worshipper in the Sri Mariamman Hindu Temple, Ho Chi Minh City |
Other Entertainments in the Park
We spent a little time watching life in the park. Several groups of young men were playing keepie uppie using a sort of elongated
shuttlecock rather than a football. We had seen this game played in open spaces
everywhere in Vietnam [update: a similar game is playedwith a rattan ball in Myanmar.].
We briefly watched the filming of a television drama. Two young women sat on a park bench having a quietly intense conversation while
surrounded by an army of cameraman, soundmen, make-up artists and producers,
not to mention a fair few onlookers. I was surprised by how low-key television
acting is compared to the stage version.
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In the park, Ho Chi Minh City |
After attempting to photograph the cavalry charge of motorbikes whenever the traffic lights change we had our last Vietnamese meal
of chicken and cashew nuts, prawns and peppers followed by a Franco-Vietnamese
crepe stuffed with mango and smothered with chocolate sauce.
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Motorcycles, Ho Chi Minh City |
Shoe shine Boys and Battered Trainers
In the afternoon we eventually gave in to a pair of shoe shine boys and let them loose on our old and battered trainers. We agreed to be
seriously overcharged and watched them sit on the pavement and make a determined
assault on our footwear. After a further attempt to overcharge us for insoles,
they returned our shoes several shades closer to their original white.
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Cleaning our trainers Ho Chi Minh City |
After that there was a little time to kill before we set off for the airport for the long journey home.
Our thanks to Haivenu travel of Hanoi, and especifically to Phong,
the branch manager in Ho Chi Minh City, who made all our travel arrangements
with commendable efficiency. I was glad we were able to meet before we set off
home.
Thanks
Thanks also to our excellent guides
Truong in Hanoi
Minh in Sa Pa
Vinh in Hue and Hoi An
Trang in Ho Chi Minh and the Mekong Delta
Also all our drivers who kept us safe in Vietnam’s sometimes
challenging traffic.
And, finally, the families we stayed with in the northern
highlands and the Mekong Delta.
Vietnam North to South
Prelude: Raybans in Heathrow and Saigon
Part 1: Hanoi (1) Ethnic Minorities, The Old City and Water Puppets
Part 2: Hanoi (2) Bat Trang, Quan Ho Music and Fighting Cocks
Part 3: Ha Long Bay
Part 4: Lao Cai, Coc Ly Market and Sa Pa
Part 5: Trekking from Sa Pa (1), Sa Pa to Ta Van
Part 6: Trekking from Sa Pa (2) Ta Van to Ban Den
Part 7: Trekking from Sa Pa (3), Around Ban Den then back to Hanoi
Part 8: Hanoi (3), The Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum and the Temple of Literature
Part 9: Hue (1), The Citadel, The Battle of Hue 1968 and Some New Things to Eat
Part 10: Hue (2), A Self-Immolating Monk, an Impotent Emperor and Imperial Dinner
Part 11: Da Nang
Part 12: Hoi An and My Son
Part 13: Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)
Part 14: The Mekong Delta (1), Can Bei and a Cornucopia of Fruit
Part 15: The Mekong Delta (2), To Vinh Long and Can Tho
Part 16: The Mekong Delta (3): Cai Rang and My Tho
Part 17: The Cu Chi Tunnels and the Cao Dai Great Temple
THE END