
PHOTO ESSAY: For the Vietnamese diaspora, Saigon's fall 50 years ago evokes mixed emotions
When the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese forces 50 years ago this week, it prompted a mass exodus of some 2 million people — hundreds of thousands fleeing perilously on small boats across open water to escape the communist regime.
Many ultimately settled in Southern California's Orange County in an area now known as 'Little Saigon,' not far from Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, where the first refugees were airlifted upon reaching the U.S. The diaspora now also has significant populations in Virginia, Texas and Washington state, as well as in countries including France and Australia. Still, the community in Southern California comprises the largest and most well-established Vietnamese population anywhere outside Vietnam.
Memories of Wednesday's anniversary of the fall of Saigon — the South Vietnamese city renamed Ho Chi Minh City by the communists — has conjured up mixed feelings from grief and resentment to honor and pride in the diaspora here.
For those who lived through the war, the 50th anniversary marks a time of mourning as they remember what they lost — their homeland, their past lives, even their identity. Five decades later, the pain is still raw. One man still can't bring himself to say much about the family he had to leave behind. Others were barely toddlers when they arrived in a foreign land.
The day Saigon fell — April 30, 1975 — is referred to by the older generation as 'Black April' or 'National Day of Resentment.'
But for their children and grandchildren, many with scant knowledge of the war, the anniversary is a time to honor the resiliency of an immigrant community and to celebrate the accomplishments of a population that started as refugees and now has become an influential part of California and U.S. society.
'I don't really think about it in a negative light,' said Linda Nguyen, a local business leader whose parents were refugees. 'For my generation, it's about honoring what happened, but also celebrating our future and our current successes.'
Little Saigon in Orange County has evolved from a commercial district contained within a few city blocks in Westminster in the late 1980s to a sprawling region spanning several cities. It's also now considered the cultural capital for the Vietnamese diaspora around the world.
'We were looking for a freedom to prosper,' said Trí Trần, a University of California, Irvine professor who left Vietnam by sea on a boat in 1986.
Today, thousands of restaurants, shops and offices bear Vietnamese names.
Little Saigon is not only home to Asian Garden Mall, the largest Vietnamese shopping mall in the U.S., but it also hosts the world's largest international Vietnamese film festival.
The population has become a powerful voting bloc in Orange County, elevating some of the first Vietnamese-Americans to elected office. For the first time last year, Orange County elected a Vietnamese-American to Congress. Derek Tran, a Democrat whose parents were refugees, triumphed in a district historically favorable to Republicans.
'We're very much a young community in this country,' Tran said. 'We're finding our place, but we're also figuring out how to consolidate our voice and our culture and our history.'
'Black April'
Marking the anniversary that ultimately led to the war's end, many Little Saigon businesses and storefronts are adorned with South Vietnam flags. Even the Asian Garden Mall has a prominent 1975 sign, bearing both the U.S. and the South Vietnam flags.
Hưng Vũ, a member of the South Vietnamese military who arrived in 1975, plans to reunite with old friends and share stories at a community event Wednesday about how daily life was reshaped by life in the U.S.
'This is no festive occasion,' said Vũ, who owns a uniform store that specializes in recreating the South Vietnamese military's uniforms, ribbons and medals. 'It's a day of mourning.'
He recalled feeling overwhelmed in a new country where he couldn't speak the language and didn't understand social norms. He didn't even know how to get around or make a living.
'The knowledge gap was tremendous,' Vũ said in Vietnamese. 'But we were hungry, so we went out and found a way to feed ourselves.'
Many, including former members of wealthy South Vietnamese families, were forced to take on low-paid jobs in their new country, such as cleaning houses and working at nail salons, to survive. Some worked multiple jobs while going to school to send money back to relatives in Vietnam.
They included teenagers who arrived in the U.S. alone, said Tram Le, who studied the experience of the first generation of Vietnamese Americans after the war.
'They lost their childhood,' she said. 'Their whole lives, they're just sacrificing.'
Shifting attitudes today among young Vietnamese Americans
Those born and raised in the U.S. often were shielded by their parents from learning about the horrors of the war and the divisions in their homeland that erupted into civil conflict between North and South Vietnam.
The younger generations no longer carry the fervor of anti-communist sentiment that was once a big part of life in Little Saigon, where a portrait of the late North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh in 1999 prompted a 53-day protest.
'The political theme that was once significant to our parents did not carry on to us,' Linda Nguyen said. 'To us, Vietnam is Vietnam.'
The focus for the younger generations is on today and what lies ahead.
Young Vietnamese American entrepreneurs no longer shun Vietnam and are working directly with businesses in Vietnam with much success, said Tim Nguyễn, the head of the Vietnamese American Chamber of Commerce.
They are also talking about their mental health needs, a topic once taboo among Vietnamese. Traditional names, food and áo dài dresses — once considered embarrassing — are now points of pride, while artists and filmmakers are exploring ways to expand the Vietnamese-American narrative beyond the war, said Tram Le.
Tâm Nguyễn, the former head of the chamber of commerce, is among a growing number of Vietnamese-Americans who are choosing to return to Little Saigon to preserve their families' business legacies. He took over his parents' cosmetology school in Little Saigon, which has trained more than 50,000 students over four decades.
'We're the cultural bridges between generations,' he said. 'We're very proud to be Vietnamese, while we're also proud that we're contributing greatly to the American society.'
___
This is a documentary photo story curated by AP photo editors. For more coverage of the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War's end, visit https://apnews.com/hub/vietnam-war.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
01-06-2025
- Scottish Sun
Moment TV daredevil Guy Martin makes savage war weapon napalm as he tours Vietnam 50 years after fall of Saigon
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) LEGENDARY motorbike racer Guy Martin tried his hand at making napalm as he headed to Vietnam to mark 50 years since the end of the war. For the latest "Our Guy in…" Channel 4 series, Guy travelled from Hanoi in the north of the country Ho Chi Minh city in the south and saw first hand the legacy of a war that claimed more than 1.3million lives. 11 The US deployed terrifying weapons such as napalm - a fearsome mixture of chemicals used to burn through miles of thick jungle 11 Mixing a small amount of its components, Guy was able to see the weapon behind some of the most horrific imagery that defined the Vietnam War Credit: Alamy 11 South Vietnamese forces follow terrified children after a napalm attack Credit: Instagram Speaking exclusive to The Sun, Guy said: "They're all looking forward, they're not dwelling on the past, and they're not letting the war define them. It just blew me away." The war between the communist North and western-aligned South intensified in 1965 when the US committed serious force over fears that Soviet influence was spreading in the region. After eight years of intense fighting, the US finally withdrew in 1973 and in 1975 evacuated the country once and for all, when Communist forces surrounded the country's embassy in the country's capital of Saigon, since renamed Ho Chi Minh city. In total, 58,000 American troops were killed - over half of whom were aged just 18. Guy took a Soviet-era motorbike down the route of the legendary Ho Chi Minh trail, a supply route used by the Viet Cong communist guerrillas. It proved crucial in giving them the upper hand over the much more technologically advanced Americans. More than a million tonnes of supplies were transported via the trail, often using nothing more than pushbikes and improvised bridges to cross rivers. But limited resources and a deep knowledge of the landscape made the Vietnamese skilled engineers, and experts at creating boobytraps that would prove devastating to the Americans. In response, the US deployed terrifying weapons such as Napalm - a fearsome mixture of chemicals used to burn through miles of thick jungle. Mixing a small amount of its components in a jar, Guy was then able to see for himself the weapon behind some of the most horrific imagery that defined the war. He said: "That is the worst weapon. Absolutely horrible. "The fire would be that intense, it'll drag oxygen from wherever it can get it, so it'll suffocate whoever's in the building. "The heat would be a thousand degrees. You're not lasting long." Another weapon used with devastating effect by the United States was a herbicide called Agent Orange, designed to destroy vegetation in an attempt to deprive the Vietnamese of cover. 11 Guy paid a visit to Son, a lecturer who is battling the devastating impact of a herbicide called Agent Orange 11 A helicopter sprays Agent Orange on a dense jungle Credit: Instagram/Chloe ferry 11 Guy visited Vietnam to mark 50 years since the end of the war Like the millions of bombs dropped, its legacy can still be felt today. Guy paid a visit to Son, a maths and computer programming lecturer who is one of those battling the effects today. His father was in the north Vietnamese army, and at one point during the war found himself soaked in the liquid dropped from an American plane. Tests conducted years later confirmed he had been poisoned, and he passed away from cancer in 2006. The genetic damage caused by the chemical has left Son born with birth defects and unable to walk. Guy said: "They used the same weed killer than they use to kill the weeds on the side of the road, but it was 20 times stronger. 'And the landmass that they covered was bigger than Wales.' 11 Phan Thi Kim Phuc, 9, bearing the scars of a napalm strike two months earlier in 1972 11 Nine-year-old Phan Thi Kim Phuc is comforted by her mother in 1972 two days after a napalm attack on her village 11 Dao Van Loi, 69, holds his daughter who suffers from disability problems as a result of Agent Orange used in the Vietnam War An estimated 3 million Vietnamese are still affected by its aftermath. In one month alone, the US dropped as many bombs on Vietnam as it during the entire Second World War. Many of them failed to explode on impact, meaning that acres of the country remain highly-dangerous no-go zones. In total, more than 100,000 people in the country have died since the end of the war as a result of left-over explosives. Guy joined the frontline of the effort to clear the countryside as he headed out with a team of charity workers. 'People are still getting killed because of unexploded mines and fields,' Guy said. 'They've been at it for 30-odd years, just working their way through the fields, using the metal detectors to find the mines and bombs, and then doing a controlled explosion,' Guy added as he reflected on joining in the operation. 'It was great to be part of.' After heading out into the field with metal detectors, Guy and the team came across three unexploded bombs in the small area they were sweeping. A controlled explosion is then performed once the device is wrapped in sandbags, the detonation cord dragged out to a safe distance, and locals warned to clear the area. Guy was then shown how to use the detonation switch, and after a countdown from ten, triggered the explosion. 'There was muck and stuff flying everywhere,' he said. 'And this was a daily occurrence.' Our Guy in Vietnam airs on Channel 4 at 9pm, Sunday June 1. 11 Bombs with a mixture of napalm and white phosphorus jelly dropped by Vietnamese AF Skyraider bombers explode


Daily Mail
30-05-2025
- Daily Mail
Marine reveals chilling moment he heroically stopped manic passenger from killing all onboard Houston flight
A heroic Marine has told how he managed to stop a manic passenger from killing everyone onboard a flight from Japan to Houston, Texas. Jody Armentrout, a sergeant major who has served in the Marines for over 20 years, was sitting in the emergency exit row on All Nippon Airways Flight 114 from Tokyo to Houston on Saturday when he said he noticed a man acting strange. Trained to remain vigilant at all times, Armentrout said he watched as the man take his backpack into one of the bathrooms, then came out and went to another bathroom on the flight - and then a third. 'He came out of that one and began pacing up and down the aisle, so that just threw my radar on,' the 50-year-old Marine told NBC News. Soon, he said, he saw the man eyeing the emergency exit door next to him. At that point, Armentrout said he stood up to block the man from the exit door - which only prompted the manic passenger to rush to the door in the opposite aisle. The man immediately grabbed the strap on the door - and Armentrout said he knew he had just seconds to act. 'About that time is when I slammed him, put him on the ground,' the Marine said. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Abigail Dye (@abigaildyenews) 'And then there was an older gentleman sitting on that side that woke up and he got up and kind of helped me.' Together, the two men were able to secure the unruly passenger into a seat as he tried to wrestle free. They were aided by flight attendants, who Armentrout said handed him zip ties, which he placed around the man's wrists to secure him to the seat. Armentrout then sat with the man until the plane safely landed at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport in Washington, where it was temporarily diverted. As he sat with the unidentified passenger, Armentrout said he noticed the man's eyes. 'You could definitely tell there was something going on.' When the plane finally landed in Seattle just about 45 minutes later, police escorted the man off of the flight. They could be seen in footage posted online telling the man, 'If you try to fight us, force will be used against you.' One officer says: 'Once I take you out of the seat, we're going to escort you off the flight, okay? If you try to fight us, force will be used against you.' The man was then apparently taken off the plane without incident, and was evaluated. Airport officials have since claimed the man had experienced some sort of 'medical episode' and was transported to a nearby hospital. But the drama of the international flight did not end there- as another passenger who FBI agents say was 'frustrated at the flight diversion' punched a bathroom door. That individual, who has not been identified, was also removed from the flight - which then continued on to Houston, landing at around 12.42 pm local time. When it finally landed, Armentrout said he was just glad to be on the ground. He noted that he had just been acting out of concern for his fellow passengers, including multiple infants. 'I just knew he was up to something crazy and at the end of the day, I was willing to take the risk of him saying "I'm not doing anything," and then just them making him go sit back down, than me allowing him to do anything that's going to put anybody at risk,' the Marine said. He added that he now hopes others also remain aware of their surroundings. 'I want to make sure everybody understands what time we are in in this world nowadays and that they need to be aware of their surroundings all the time,' Armentrout said. As of Thursday, no charges had been filed for either the man who apparently tried to open the emergency door or the other individual who punched the door.


Reuters
29-05-2025
- Reuters
Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Kenyan author who reckoned with colonial legacy, dies at 87
NAIROBI, May 29 (Reuters) - Celebrated Kenyan novelist and playwright Ngugi wa Thiong'o, whose sharp criticisms of post-independence elites led to his jailing and two decade in exile, has died at the age of 87, Kenya's president said. Shaped by an adolescence where he witnessed the armed Mau Mau struggle for independence from Britain, Thiong'o took aim in his writings at colonial rule and the Kenyan elites who inherited many of its privileges. He was arrested in December 1977 and detained for a year without charge in a maximum security prison after peasants and workers performed his play "Ngaahika Ndeenda" (I Will Marry When I Want). Angered by the play's criticism of inequalities in Kenyan society, the authorities sent three truckloads of police to raze the theatre, Thiong'o later said. He went into exile in 1982 after he said he learned of plans by President Daniel arap Moi's security services to arrest and kill him. He went on to become a professor of English and comparative literature at the University of California-Irvine. Thiong'o ended his exile in 2004 after Moi left office following more than two decades in power marked by widespread arrests, killings and torture of political opponents. Kenya's current president, William Ruto, paid tribute to Thiong'o after his death in the U.S. following reports of a struggle with ill health in recent years. "The towering giant of Kenyan letters has put down his pen for the final time," Ruto said on his X account. "Always courageous, he made an indelible impact on how we think about our independence, social justice as well as the uses and abuses of political and economic power." Although Thiong'o said upon returning to Kenya in 2004 that he bore no grudge against Moi, he told Reuters in an interview three years later that Kenyans should not forget the abuses of the era. "The consequences of 22 years of dictatorship are going to be with us for a long time and I don't like to see us returning to that period," he said. Thiong'o's best-known works included his debut novel "Weep Not Child", which chronicled the Mau Mau struggle and "Devil on the Cross", which he wrote on toilet paper while in prison. In the 1980s, he abandoned English to write in his mother tongue Gikuyu, saying he was bidding farewell to the imported language of Kenya's former colonial master.