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Vietnamese community in DFW marks a sad day in history — the fall of Saigon

The North Texas Vietnamese community has been commemorating that day for more than four decades.

Women in matching long, white dresses stood in the sunlight outside the Vietnamese Community Center in Garland on Sunday. Some held the American flag, others the former flag of the Republic of Vietnam, yellow with red stripes.

 Dee Doai, president of the Vietnamese American Community of Greater Dallas, is interviewed ahead of the ceremony.
Bret Jaspers
/
KERA
Dee Doai, president of the Vietnamese American Community of Greater Dallas, is interviewed ahead of the ceremony.

Many men were dressed in military garb. Some also held flags, while others carried rifles.

 Attendees flew a flag representing the defeated South Vietnamese government during the ceremony, along with American and Texan flags.
Bret Jaspers
/
KERA
Attendees flew a flag representing the defeated South Vietnamese government during the ceremony, along with American and Texan flags.

“Please remember that we are American, but we are also of Vietnamese heritage,” Dee Doai said to a large crowd. Doai is president of the Vietnamese American Community of Greater Dallas.

“Our presence in the United States and anywhere in the world but Vietnam is the result of the sacrifices of our parents and our grandparents after the fall of Saigon," she said.

Doai was born in Vietnam after the war, in 1979. Like thousands of other refugees, her father fled the country by boat and sponsored her and her mother to come to the U.S. in 1991.

“They risked their lives on small boats in the ocean, waded through the jungles,” she said. “They gave up their freedom in the re-education camps so that we can enjoy this freedom, this democracy, and human rights — as some of us, including myself, sometimes take for granted.”

84-year-old Richard Nguyen was working in the presidential bureau in Saigon when the South Vietnamese military surrendered to the North. He was arrested and put in what was known as a re-education camp — essentially a prison camp operated by the Communist government.

Nguyen said everyone should know what happened during and after the war.

“It is very, very important,” he told KERA. “Not for me but for the generation to come, to let them know how it happened and why we are here.”

 Community members drove their cars around Garland before returning to the Vietnamese American center.
Bret Jaspers
/
KERA
Community members drove their cars around Garland before returning to the Vietnamese American center.

Helping the Vietnamese community is what drives Cindy Nguyen (no relation to Richard), who also came as a refugee. She’s often at the community center signing up people for Medicare and food assistance and translating information for them.

“We are lucky,” she said. “We have a community that can help a lot of Vietnamese people to get together and to learn.”

A few minutes later, she rushed into another room filled with lunch sacks, again busy helping.

Bret Jaspers
/
KERA

Doai said she brings her three kids here each year to learn about the history of Vietnam. She shares a hope that others stated as well - that the children continue this tradition, long after she is gone.

“Access to information is a lot greater now, today, than it used to be,” she said.

Doai encourages people “just try to understand both sides of the story and try to figure out for yourself what is right and wrong.”

Got a tip? Email Stella M. Chávez at schavez@kera.org. You can follow Stella on Twitter @stellamchavez.

KERA News is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider making a tax-deductible gift today. Thank you.

Copyright 2023 KERA. To see more, visit KERA.

  Members of the Vietnamese American community in North Texas remember the fall of Saigon in 1975 with a ceremony in Garland.
Bret Jaspers / KERA
/
KERA
Members of the Vietnamese American community in North Texas remember the fall of Saigon in 1975 with a ceremony in Garland.
  Many of the older men at the ceremony were members of the South Vietnamese military during the Vietnam Way.
Bret Jaspers / KERA
/
KERA
Many of the older men at the ceremony were members of the South Vietnamese military during the Vietnam Way.
Bret Jaspers / KERA
/
KERA

StellaChávezisKERA’seducation reporter/blogger. Her journalism roots run deep: She spent a decade and a half in newspapers – including seven years atThe Dallas Morning News, where she covered education and won the Livingston Award for National Reporting, which is given annually to the best journalists across the country under age 35. The award-winning entry was “Yolanda’s Crossing,” a seven-partDMN series she co-wrote that reconstructs the 5,000-mile journey of a young Mexican sexual-abuse victim from a smallOaxacanvillage to Dallas. For the last two years, she worked for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,where she was part of the agency’s outreach efforts on the Affordable Care Act and ran the regional office’s social media efforts.
Bret Jaspers is a reporter for KERA. His stories have aired nationally on the BBC, NPR’s newsmagazines, and APM’s Marketplace. He collaborated on the series Cash Flows, which won a 2020 Sigma Delta Chi award for Radio Investigative Reporting. He's a member of Actors' Equity, the professional stage actors union.