logo
50 Years On, Survivors Guilt Lingers Over Vietnam Veterans and Families

50 Years On, Survivors Guilt Lingers Over Vietnam Veterans and Families

Epoch Times30-04-2025

SHOW LOW, Ariz.—In every war, combat veterans grapple with a profound and haunting question: why did I survive while others did not?
Decades after the Vietnam War concluded on April 30, 1975, the weight of 'survivor's guilt' continues to overshadow many families, particularly those whose loved ones returned forever changed.
Veterans and family members of those who survived the war shared their memories, the challenges of reintegration, and the lasting impact the experience has had on their lives with the Epoch Times since the fall of Saigon 50 years ago.
A Mother's Burden
Karen Hook's late brother, Vernon Stearns, was a Green Beret in Vietnam, an elite special forces soldier coming from a family of 'Army brats' who loved their flag and country.
When the family went days on end without hearing from Vernon during the war, Hook could sense the impact it had on her mother.
Her mother would fall silent and try to remain strong.
Finally, the news would arrive that he was safe after another mission. The family rejoiced every time.
Related Stories
5/17/2024
10/16/2023
'It was difficult for the entire family,' Hook, 70, recalled, reflecting on the long-ago days of the Vietnam War.
'But I think it's the mother who suffers the most out of everybody.'
In 1971, the war finally ended for her older brother.
Although he survived physically, he returned home as a changed person.
'He didn't talk about Vietnam very much,' Hook, the director of Turn of the Card Community Center in Show Low, Arizona, told The Epoch Times.
'The only thing that was hard for him was that he came back with [post-traumatic stress disorder] and a few other things.'
Flowers with messages of gratitude are left at the Vietnam War Memorial near the Little Saigon section in Westminster, Calif., on April 28, 2005.Her brother had difficulty sleeping. He started having frequent night terrors that made him wake up screaming.
In his thoughts, he was experiencing the war all over again.
His wife struggled to cope with the emotional trauma and survivor's guilt her husband experienced, but it was overwhelming.
The couple eventually decided to get a divorce.
Hook said that her brother never expressed his feelings about the war, as he kept them locked away in a vault of privacy.
'But I'm sure my brother felt [guilt],' she said. 'I've had other friends who returned feeling guilty.'
A Recognized Condition
The Department of Veterans Affairs recognizes survivor's guilt in veterans as a component of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Its symptoms include recurring memories or dreams of the traumatic event, emotional numbness, irritability, and anxiety.
A visitor pays homage at the Vietnam veterans traveling wall in Camp Verde, Ariz., on March 29, 2023.
Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
A corollary of PTSD and survivor's guilt is the 'moral injury' experienced by many returning soldiers due to the orders they followed.
Moral injury is not classified as a psychiatric disorder, though it shares many characteristics with PTSD, according to Veterans Affairs.
Moral injuries can arise from direct involvement in combat actions, such as killing or harming opponents or civilians.
They can also result from indirect experiences, such as witnessing death, failing to prevent others' questionable actions, or giving or receiving orders they view as serious moral transgressions.
Weight of War
On a broader level, survivor's guilt is a terrible burden, as the soldier must also carry the weight of those who have died.
'Survivor's guilt is an often misunderstood yet profoundly impactful emotional experience, particularly prevalent among veterans,' according to Cumberland Hall Hospital in Hopkinsville, Kentucky.
'Survivor's guilt is a psychological response to surviving a situation where others have died or suffered. It is common among veterans who have returned from combat zones.'
The condition involves feelings of self-blame, depression, and sadness—powerful emotions that can be difficult to process or resolve.
Mary Johnson in Show Low, Ariz., on April 2, 2025.
Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
The Vietnam War (1964-1973) officially ended 50 years ago on April 30, 1975, when Saigon fell to communist North Vietnamese forces.
The conflict resulted in the loss of 58,220 U.S. soldiers.
Thousands of emotionally scarred veterans returned home and were never the same again.
Junior Garrison, 82, a veteran from Arizona, feels that the enduring psychological impact of war is the price one pays for having served.
Garrison served in the Army from 1961 to 1981 and spent 13 months in Vietnam.
'You know, anybody that goes to war for too long and it doesn't affect them, there's something wrong with them,' Garrison told The Epoch Times.
He said that some people managed to avoid the military draft during the war.
He decided to enlist instead.
'There were a lot of people that went to Canada,' he said. 'There were a lot of people that went to college.'
'I came back from Vietnam.'
The military draft recruited more than 2 million men during the war, while about 9 million served voluntarily from a pool of approximately 27 million.
In 1969, the Army deployed Garrison's unit to a forward air base in South Vietnam, where they encountered numerous rocket attacks from the Viet Cong.
Garrison said that he didn't know any of the men who died in the attacks, but their deaths are something that would stay with him forever.
Fishers of Men for Veterans co-founder Marty Jarvey prepares backpacks filled with supplies for homeless veterans in east-central Arizona on Jan. 31, 2025.
Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
'Oh, yeah. I've talked to a lot of people—it's a guilty feeling,' Garrison said.
'But you know what? It's a normal reaction.'
Where Have They Gone?
Mary Johnson, 83, from Arizona, lost her husband, Gary, 15 years ago at age 67 due to complications related to Agent Orange exposure in Vietnam.
'He was never sick a day in his life,' Johnson said.
Agent Orange was the code name for the herbicide and defoliant used by the military during the Vietnam War, specifically in Operation Ranch Hand, which took place from 1962 to 1971.
She described her husband as a man with a dedicated military career who trained for combat.
'He was a [Army] scout dog and had a scout dog platoon,' she said.
'They were out in the jungle all the time.'
Junior Garrison, 82, in Show Low, Ariz., on April 2, 2025.
Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
Gary's second tour involved being an adviser to the South Vietnamese, 'so he lived out in the jungle with them.'
Johnson said her husband decided to stay for six additional months in place of a brother, whose platoon had been 'wiped out' by the North Vietnamese.
'He stayed so his brother wouldn't have to go back,' she said.
Johnson does not remember her husband ever displaying signs of trauma related to combat.
'He said the worst thing that happened to him was he stubbed his toe on the way to the showers,' she said.
However, her husband did not leave the battlefield unscathed.
He lost friends and spent years searching for other comrades after the war.
'We did find one in Las Cruces, New Mexico,' Johnson said. 'And there was one—his last name was Ivy. [Gary] tried and tried and tried to find him.
'He never found him—and he was sad about that.'
Ronald Eugene Hudson, 74, divides his time between Arizona and Costa Rica.
He spent 26 years in the Navy and served during the Vietnam War.
'I talked with one guy. If I remember, he was from Kansas,' Hudson said. 'He said he felt guilty that he came back alive. And half of the friends that he was in the company with didn't even come back at all.'
'I've never had the guilt,' Hudson told The Epoch Times, 'but what I have is a lot of respect for anybody that went over there and came back.'
'They Were Soldiers, and Young'
Marty Jarvey from Lakeside, Arizona, is a former member of the Nurse Corps during the Vietnam War.
As a nurse, she witnessed the devastating aftermath of the war while supporting U.S. soldiers in North Vietnamese prison camps.
'You were there to help them, and then, all of a sudden, they died,' Jarvey said. 'Skinny, bones, no hair.'
She said it was even harder to see how they looked in photographs as young men, full of life.
Jarvey spent around three weeks traveling between the orphanages and prisoner of war camps, providing assistance to those in need and helping with the delivery of bodies for repatriation.
'Do I feel guilty? Do I feel sad because there was something I could have done to control it? There's nothing you could control there,' Jarvey told The Epoch Times.
'The mass destruction was already there. What were you going to do?'
More than 1,800 burial plots were decorated with flags on Memorial Day at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Cemetery on May 27, 2023.
Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
One day, while living in Southern California, Karen Hook's father built a flagpole in the family's front yard. He raised Old Glory, around which they gathered to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
She recalled this as a happy time in her childhood when war and heartache felt distant.
'I remember it as the most wonderful country in the world,' Hook said. 'I still feel that way.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The lasting impact of Operation Babylift 50 years after the end of the Vietnam War
The lasting impact of Operation Babylift 50 years after the end of the Vietnam War

CBS News

time20 hours ago

  • CBS News

The lasting impact of Operation Babylift 50 years after the end of the Vietnam War

In April 1975, during the chaotic final days of the Vietnam War, there were some 3,000 babies in the country that had been fathered by U.S. servicemen. "Dad felt very responsibly that he wanted to get those babies out," Steve Ford told CBS News — "dad" in this case being then-President Gerald Ford. "The word was once the North got into Saigon, that these babies would be possibly slaughtered, killed," Steve Ford said. President Ford moved urgently, and Operation Babylift was born, flying more than 2,500 of those children to the United States. But the first flight in the operation crashed just minutes after takeoff, killing 78 of the nearly 250 children on board. The president was undeterred, and the flights resumed the very next day, filled with cardboard file boxes that had been repurposed into makeshift cradles. "Dad met the first plane, and one of the best pictures for me is seeing him carrying that first baby off the plane," Steve Ford said. Thuy Williams, then just 5 years old, was on that flight. "There's actually a picture of me reading a book to the little kid next to me and I just look calm," she told CBS News. Williams had originally been placed on the first flight — the one that crashed — but was pulled off at the last moment due to overcrowding. Her mother, who brought her to the plane, believed she had died in the wreckage. It wasn't until decades later that the two were reunited in Vietnam. Even beyond the tragedy of the crash, the mission has drawn some criticism over the years. Not all of the children airlifted were orphans. Some had been temporarily placed in orphanages by parents desperate to get them to safety, believing they might be reunited someday. In a small number of cases, children were evacuated without parental or family consent, fueling debate over the ethics of the operation. "My mom gave me up to save my life," Williams said when asked about some of the problems with the operation. "A lot of those kids, their parents gave them up to save their lives. Yes, I know that some were taken that weren't supposed to, that parents expected to get their kids back, but the reality is, what would their life have been like if their parents did get them back, you know? They wouldn't have had the opportunities that they had here in the U.S." Steve Ford acknowledged, "Anytime you have a mission like this, is it gonna be 100%? Absolutely not. That's- this is war. You're trying to do the best you can very quickly." "I can not imagine what that mother would have to process to make that decision," he said of women like Williams' mother, who gave their kids up to get them out of the country. Williams was adopted by a couple in Portland, Oregon, and said she began to consider herself an American "pretty much probably right away." "When your first memories are seeing people killed, those are things you wanna leave behind," she said. Ten years after her arrival in the U.S., Williams made the under-18 National Soccer Team. She then spent eight years in the Army, built a construction company and started a nonprofit that takes kids to Africa. To this day, she coaches soccer, track and lacrosse, and she's so close to her players that she's officiated weddings for two of them. "I understand the opportunities that I had being here in the U.S. I just wanted to serve," she said. Steve Ford and Williams recently had a chance to meet at the Gerald Ford Museum. "My dad would love her story. It would bring tears to his eye to see what she's done with her life," Steve Ford said. "Someone said to me, I'm not sure they'd come get those babies today. I think back on dad. He had the moral clarity to go save those babies. And we had an obligation to do something, to help them," he added.

Story of Vietnamese orphans who resettled here 50 years ago proves there are greater things than politics
Story of Vietnamese orphans who resettled here 50 years ago proves there are greater things than politics

New York Post

time21 hours ago

  • New York Post

Story of Vietnamese orphans who resettled here 50 years ago proves there are greater things than politics

Fifty years ago, near the end of the Vietnam War, as North Vietnamese troops headed south, the director of the Cam Ranh Christian Orphanage, Pastor Nguyen Xuan Ha — known to everyone as Mr. Ha —decided it was time to escape to somewhere safe. Mr. Ha put 85 children and staff on two buses and headed for Saigon where he hoped they could flee to safety. One of the buses was shot at by a North Vietnamese soldier and the buses separated. Somehow they re-united in Saigon. After renting a boat and getting some distance from shore, the engine quit. For five days they drifted before a Thailand tanker approached. The captain refused to help, but later changed his mind, turned around and towed them for a while. After cutting the tow line, a group of fishermen towed them toward Singapore. Soldiers refused to let them ashore. Mr. Ha wrote a name on a piece of paper and asked a soldier if he could locate a missionary named Ralph Neighbour to help. Dr. Neighbour (now 96), newly arrived in Singapore, was miraculously found. He picks up the story from there in an email to me: 'Singapore government kept them out on St. John's Island. Our missionary team took clothes and food out. USA embassy contacted Swiss United Nations Refugee Center. Special flight arrived. Children whisked thru Singapore on bus with windows covered. Government feared losing neutrality during war. No official record they were there.' I knew Dr. Neighbour from when he was a pastor in Houston where I worked at a local TV station. He called and asked if I could help get the orphans and staff to the United States and find temporary housing for them. I contacted some Washington officials I knew and permission for them to enter the country was granted. When they arrived in Houston, a church couple with a large ranch offered them shelter and food until the Buckner Children and Family Services in Dallas could assist with processing and adoptions. I interviewed the youngest, oldest and one in between who made the anniversary trip. Sam Schrade, who was a baby when he was rescued from the streets of Saigon, is 51 and owns a successful media business in Houston. How would his life have been different had he stayed in Vietnam? He says the fact that he is of 'mixed race' (American-Asian) would make it 'doubly hard' because native Vietnamese 'look down upon such people. I have been told by many people I would not have had a good life here because of the race issue and a government that didn't want me.' Kelli St. German, now 56, thinks she might have been growing coffee beans and doing hard labor had she not come to America. She also believes she would not have developed a strong faith because of the state's antipathy toward religion. 'I became a teacher for 30 years.' Thomas Ho, the oldest orphan, now 76, was 25 when he left Vietnam. He helped organize the evacuation and prepared small amounts of food for the children. In America he became a chef and then studied to become an engineer. He says if he had stayed in Vietnam, 'I might not have survived, especially at my age now. Life here is very difficult. A lot of the food is not very healthy.' Reuniting with these adults, many of whom I met when they were children, is a reminder that there are things far greater than politics, celebrities and the petty jealousies that are the focus of too many of us. There are few greater blessings than to have had a role in changing these lives for the better. These former orphans are blessed. So am I. Cal Thomas is a veteran political commentator, columnist and author.

From New Orleans to Normandy: Honoring Louisiana's WWII heroes
From New Orleans to Normandy: Honoring Louisiana's WWII heroes

Axios

timea day ago

  • Axios

From New Orleans to Normandy: Honoring Louisiana's WWII heroes

As the nation remembers D-Day on Friday's 81st anniversary, a dwindling number of World War II veterans remain with us. About 300 WWII vets are still living in Louisiana, according to the latest figures from the Department of Veterans Affairs. The big picture: About 16.4 million Americans served in WWII, but only about 66,100 were still living as of September 2024, per the VA's projections. "We have the enormous responsibility to ensure that the memories and experiences of the war will not be lost as those who lived through it leave this world," said Stephen J. Watson, president and CEO of the National WWII Museum in New Orleans, in a statement. Zoom out: The museum is welcoming back WWII veterans as part of its commemoration events. It had an overnight display Thursday with 2,510 candle luminaria to honor the Americans who died on D-Day. At 6:30am Friday, there's a remembrance gathering to mark the moment the invasion of Normandy began. About 25 WWII veterans and Holocaust survivors will open the museum at 8:50am Friday to a hero's welcome. The main ceremony, which is also free, starts at 11am. Full list of events. Meanwhile, it's also the museum's 25th anniversary. The venue opened in 2000 as The National D-Day Museum. It was housed in a single exhibition hall and dedicated to telling the stories of the Americans who participated in the amphibious invasion. Today, the museum spans seven pavilions and has immersive exhibits and an expansive collection of artifacts. Fun fact: The Higgins boats used on D-Day were designed and built in New Orleans. Fewer than 10 original boats remain in existence. President Dwight D. Eisenhower called Andrew Higgins "the man who won the war for us" thanks to his namesake landing craft.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store