Why Did Three Millions Vietnamese Leave Our Homeland?

 

Why Hundreds Of Thousands Boat People Died In Search Of Freedom?

 

Because We Want Freedom, and There Has Been No Freedom in Vietnam !!!

 

 

Thuyền Nhân: Boat People,

 

term used to describe the Vietnamese refugees who fled Communist rule after the Vietnam War (1975) in small boats. More than one million people became refugees. Many perished, and others, upon reaching other Southeast Asian countries, discovered they could not remain permanently. The United States, Canada, and other nations accepted most of the refugees in the late 1970s and the 1980s. It was estimated that up to 25% of those who left Vietnam have perished in the stormy seas. Thousands have died when their boats were robbed repeatedly then sank by Thai's pirates. Many women and young girls were raped then murdered or sold to brothels in Thailand.

 

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The most visible landmark near the jetty is this statue of a father dragging his daughter out of the ocean. This is easily the most touching symbol on Malaysian shores of the suffering endured by the Vietnamese boat people in their quest for a better life.

 

Ping Anchorage. Sunday, Sept 29, 2002: ... Daniel Nguyen was among the 1.6 million Vietnamese who, from 1975 to the late 1980s, made the perilous journey across the South China Sea from their troubled homeland in search of a safe haven. For him, his visit to Bidong in March was “like a spiritual and personal pilgrimage.”

 

“Personally, I would have liked to stay overnight if I could. When my kids are old enough, I would like to take them to Bidong to see their family history.” Nguyen added that he “understood the economics of not maintaining Bidong” so he did not grieve. “Still, I felt a sense of loss to see it abandoned like that. Bidong was a painful experience that we (former refugees) don’t want to re-live. However, it’s a part of our heritage as much as it’s a permanent part of Malaysian history now. Ideally we should work together to maintain a cultural sanctuary for Bidong. It should remain a beacon of freedom, a symbol of Malaysian charity and hospitality and a gesture of friendship between two peoples.

 

The boat people created a memorial on the island dedicated to the cause and the Malaysian people. It should be something all boat people should take their children (born in the United States, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, etc) to see. “But it should be seen by all Malaysians as well.”

 

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Excerpt from GENEVA, 25 June (UNHCR) -- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR):

 

Since 1975, 840,000 Vietnamese asylum-seekers have arrived in the countries of South-East Asia and Hong Kong. Over 755,000 departed for resettlement in the West. Over 81,000 have returned safely to Viet Nam.

 

The first boat people landed on the east coast of Malaysia in May 1975. In all, nearly 255,000 Vietnamese boat people were given temporary asylum in Malaysia, where they were cared for by the UNHCR and the Malaysian Red Crescent Society. A total of 248,410 were resettled in Western countries (some of them children born in the camps), and over 9,000 returned to Viet Nam.

 

At the height of the influx, Malaysia had eight camps for boat people, along the east coast and in Sabah and Serawak. As the wave of arrivals diminished, and as more people were resettled in the West, the remaining population was moved to Sungei Besi.

 

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Việt Cộng không khi nào nhận lỗi

Diễn Viên Quá Tồi Trong Một Trò Chơi Lớn

VC destroyed Boat People Memorial in Pulau Bidong

Representative Lorreta Sanchez letter

Lời Đảng (gởi bọn tị nạn) - thahuong75

Khóc Người Đáy Biển - Ngô Minh Hằng

Nhớ Để Đừng Quên - Hoài Nam

Nói Với Bạo Quyền - Ngô Minh Hằng

 

 

Vietnamese:

Di Tản và Vượt Biên, Vàng Máu và Nước Mắt

Những chuyện hải hùng của Thuyền Nhân

Trần Đức Lương đòi hũy bỏ Tượng Đài Tỵ Nạn, pdf file

30 Tháng Tư và Thuyền Nhân

Tường Trình từ đảo Ko Kra, Thái Lan

Tường Trình từ đảo Ko Kra, phần 2 và 3

Ngây Thơ, Dễ Tha Thứ và Chóng Quên

Trại Tỵ Nạn Galang

Hình Ảnh Bidong & Galang (1978-1991)

Last Days of Bidong (1991)

English:

The Dead Did Exist (Ngo Nhan Dung), pdf file

Vietnam Boat People's Plaque torn down

Boat People written by Anna Johnstone

Clara Maersk rescued 6,954 boat people

Fr. Joseph Devlin: The Boat People's Priest

Vietnamese Boat People in Malaysia

A Boat in the Quest for Freedom

Memories of boat people

Fate of The Boat People

Goodbye Boat People, Hello Cruel World

Vietnamese Refugee: Nguyen's story

Boat People, S.O.S

Links:

Galang Refugee Camp

International Catholic Migration Commission

Forgotten Isle: Pulau Bidong

Boat People: A Refugee Crisis

The suffering of the Vietnamese Boat people

The Price They Paid For Freedom

Vietnam exile recalls boat exodus

Ex-Vietnamese boat people revisit camp

Last Refugee Camp closed in Malaysia

Why they fled? The Fall of Saigon

The last Refugees in Hong Kong

USS Joseph Strauss - Rescue at Sea

USS Whipple Rescue - Desperation

 

 

If you have pictures and articles on Boat People and would like to contribute, please kindly send them to the webmaster of this website, thank you. biet-hai@pacbell.net

 

 

                                

 

 

 



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Statistic:

Vietnam, post-war Communist regime (1975 et seq.): 430,000