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By Mary Lackie
We are making plans to rebuild roads and canals, but we
cant put people back together because we dont know how, said
Don Luce, 33, former director of the International Volunteer Service in South
Vietnam.
A graduate of Cornell University school of agriculture, Luce spent
three years in Vietnam before he accepted the position of IVS director, a post
he held for six years. He resigned in Sept. 1967 in protest of American
policies.
Currently on the staff of Cornell University Southeast Asian
Studies, Luce spent days last week in Atlanta sharing his views on present
American policy in the war-torn country.
Many Catholic priests and laymen are against the war, but
were afraid to speak out. They will feel free, now, said Luce, referring
to the recent statement issued by 18 Catholic bishops at a national meeting of
the South Vietnamese hierarchy.
The statement asked for serious negotiations between the North and
South Vietnamese governments. Right now is the time to end the conflict,
despite some disadvantages...because the conflict will have to be settled
eventually...perhaps with such horrible damage and disasters that no one can
imagine them, the statement said in part.
Luce noted, This (statement) will make it easier for the
Buddhists and Catholics to get along. The reason they have been so far apart
before is that they disagreed about the war.
Nor are rural Vietnamese satisfied with Ky, Luce said. There
is an old Vietnamese saying, the rule of the emperor stops at the village
gates. The villagers can vote, but only from an approved list of
candidates. Ky is unpopular because of the war, the graft in the government,
and to them, he is the young playboy who smokes Salem cigarettes, and not the
local brand.
Looking back on his work, Luce said, We did a lot of good
through the extension program, but since mid-1965, the effort has been one of
relief. We are trying to alleviate the problems we have caused.
Luce who grew up on a Vermont farm, began his work in the
Montagnard hill country. When he would visit a strange village, the women would
call out to him, offering him a cup of tea. I was impressed by the
openness of the farmers to change and improvement. The villagers were neat.
Fruit trees were planted around the houses.
In the evenings when I would visit the homes, the children
would be seated around the table, studying. Instead of popping popcorn and
watching TV, the families would be telling stories and drinking coconut
juice.
Luce, who learned to speak several Vietnamese dialects, said,
The people talked about the future. The crops they would plant next year.
Should we try coffee trees and get a cash crop? Or, they might ask
me, Are your sweet potatoes as good as ours? He added,
And they would try a row, and tell me about it when I came back.
A matriarchal society of about 1 million people, the Montagnard
life revolves around land and family, Luce said. They were a
slash-and-burn rice culture. They would go out in the mountainside, cut down
the brush, and burn it all when it dried. Then they would use a stick to plant
rice and corn, with pumpkins scattered through the fields.
The Rhade tribe is more advanced, and many of the men have joined
the American forces, Luce said. The Vietcong see this, and they have
wiped out whole villages in retaliation.
The Bru, a smaller tribe, is so primitive they have no written
language, Luce said. Many of them are working as mercenaries for the
Vietcong, and my concern is that they may become extinct. They live just south
of the DMZ.
Near Ban Me Thout, Luce met some Montagnard friends. We had
worked together, he said, and now they were in the army. I asked
them why they didnt go home and work with their people. They said,
We are soldiers, now. The people are losing respect for their own
culture, and may never go back to their traditional society.
Farming has become a hazardous occupation. Farmers who went into
the fields at 4:30 a.m. now wait until 8-9 a.m., Luce said. They are
afraid they will be shot or recruited by the Vietcong. If the fields have been
hit by mortar shells, they dont dare farm them.
American and Vietnamese agricultural agents receive constant
complaints from the farmers about the damage from the defoliation spraying.
The Vietnamese say when you spray, it is the women and children who
suffer. There is a problem of wind drift. The spray is carried along the canals
and rice paddles and many of the people in charge of the spraying dont
know how to use the equipment, Luce said.
As the war spread, entire Montagnard villages were endangered, and
the people moved by force to cities and refugee camps. Their land became part
of the free strike zone. But the desire to return to the land was so strong,
that the villagers would escape and go back. Many never return, Luce said.
He said, The refugee situation is the real tragedy in
Vietnam. There are over 2 million, and the family structure is destroyed. Young
men have joined the Vietcong because they hate the American
colonialists, and want their own land. Whether they join one army
or the other, they are often picked up as suspects. The women are left alone,
not knowing what happened to their husbands or brothers.
Refugees are often resettled in camps often near airbases, moved
to city slums. They are allowed to take the garbage from the airbase to
feed their pigs, but are not allowed on the base to get it, Luce said.
The refugees cannot live on the meager food allotments, Luce said.
The old women wash clothes and the middle-aged women do construction
work. The young girls find jobs in bars or brothels because it pays well, but
they become social outcasts. The youngest become shoe shine boys or
pickpockets. During the evacuation of Ben Suc, Luce worked with the
refugees. The entire village was bulldozed and the people moved to a
camp. At that time, they had no idea their village would be destroyed. Now that
they are resettled, they wont plant crops. For one thing, the land is not
rice land. Even more important, they think next week we are going
home. Luce added, As long as the villager has land, he has
security.
And you cant move refugees and start feeding them two
days after they are evacuated, Luce said. This cycle isnt
good. After a certain point, they are so weak that you cant help
them.
Luce is often accused of over-sentimentality. People say I
am judging the conditions by our standards. But the villagers are upset for
reasons that are important to them. They dont have a coconut tree, they
cant work the land, and they are no longer near their ancestral burial
grounds.
There is the challenge of bringing the family back together
again, and I dont know if it can be done. The damage is permanent,
Luce said. The refugees apathy contrasts with Luces earlier
experiences. The men are gone, the women are sitting around, not talking
about their plans. They ask me, What do you have to give us? All
this opposed to the new idea, a handful of seeds -- all that I as doing when I
first came. I stopped in Japan on my way home, he said.
I always stay at the same little inn. The people are very polite, and
jump on me in a very polite way, What are you doing in Vietnam?
This time, they were happy because I was leaving. He added, I would
like to go back soon and help with the rebuilding after the war.
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