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My Lai massacre photographer reunited with survivor in Vietnam 

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(16 Mar 2018) Talk of peace dominated the 50th anniversary commemoration of the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, but among the hundreds in the audience were survivors and a former US Army photographer whose gruesome images galvanised anti-war opinion.
Friday's memorial events were held at the site of the 1968 massacre by American troops of 504 unarmed Vietnamese villagers, mostly women, children and elderly men.
The audience included Sergeant Ron Haeberle, who photographed the aftermath in My Lai, and survivor Tran Van Duc, who was six at the time and whose murdered mother was photographed by Haeberle.
The two men bonded after they met in 2011.
Duc lives in Remscheid, Germany, and a German cinematographer, curious about the connection, put him in touch by a message on Facebook to Haeberle in Ohio.
Duc recalled some US soldiers appearing at his family's house soon after landing by helicopter, who then herded him, his four siblings, and their mother out onto a trail, where American troops began shooting at them.
Duc's mother, wounded in the stomach and thigh, tried to cover him and his 14-month-old sister.
After the shooting, the soldiers moved along to the village.
Duc's sister began to cry, and their mother, fearful she would draw the soldiers to return, told him to take her to his grandmother's house, seven kilometres (4 miles) away.
Clutching his sister, Duc looked back to see his mother try to grab a bag to get something to staunch her bleeding, but he knew she was in desperate condition.
By the time his grandmother and other villagers returned to recover the remains of their loved ones, they had already been buried.
Baby Ha and another sister survived, but two of Duc's other sisters were killed.
Duc and Haeberle on Thursday visited the trail where the three, along with about three dozen other people, were shot down.
Haeberle's shocking photos were published first in November 1969 in the Plain Dealer, the biggest newspaper in his home state of Ohio, and then in Life magazine and all around the world.
He had been using his Army-issue camera to take photos of fellow soldiers to be despatched to their hometown papers, a standard military public relations practice which, he acknowledged, did not work so well that day.
It was a technicality that brought the pictures of the carnage to public view; he also carried his personal camera, a Nikon F, for which he had one roll of colour film, which meant he did not have to turn in photos to the Army's Public Information Office.
The photo which disturbed him most, he said, was "the woman with the brains lying beside her head. Because later on in life I found out it was Duc's mother. That to me was upsetting."
Haeberle came upon the killing scene after being dropped off by a helicopter in the second wave entering the village.
With no enemy - the Viet Cong, the VC - in the area firing at them, he had an unmolested view of the atrocities.
The coldblooded killing was mindboggling to Haeberle, who was 26 at the time, about six years older than the average troops in Charlie Company.
Later, he concluded the American soldiers were badly trained, scared, bitter, and since they couldn't understand why the Vietnamese villagers seemed hostile, they considered them to be just like the Viet Cong guerrillas they were fighting.
Haeberle gave his camera, the one he shot his famous photos with, what he called his My Lai camera, to Duc, who he said installed it on an altar in his home in Germany.
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20 мар 2018

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Комментарии : 19   
@Qulize
@Qulize 3 года назад
The true losers in every war was the civilian. Damn...
@JedediahSmith342
@JedediahSmith342 2 года назад
To all 100 US soldiers responsible for the My Lai massacre shame on you!!!!!!
@nikoflow_fm9541
@nikoflow_fm9541 3 года назад
bless both of these people
@shonnyNOR
@shonnyNOR 3 года назад
When will USA ever own up to all the war crimes and crimes against humanity that they have committed? Over time the crimes of Nazi-Germany and Japan fade in significance compared to the ongoing crimes committed by USA.
@enanny0616
@enanny0616 2 года назад
The war crimes that the US committed aren’t even close to the shit that the nazis and Japanese did, a group of soldiers killing a village doesn’t compare to the entire German military going out of their way to build concentration camps and go out of their way to torture and kill millions of Jews
@johnlynde9815
@johnlynde9815 Год назад
If you don't like it here leave
@jaimealvarez8896
@jaimealvarez8896 Год назад
AMÉN AMÉN AMÉN!!!
@jaimealvarez8896
@jaimealvarez8896 Год назад
​@@johnlynde9815 No he isn't going anywhere!!! Neither am I Johnny Boi!!!
@linhhoang1725
@linhhoang1725 7 месяцев назад
@@johnlynde9815 The only way you can make your country better is to recognize its mistake. If you can be proud to be an American, you can be ashamed to be an American sometimes too. Do better
@JorgeVídeos
@JorgeVídeos 4 месяца назад
Surely, when villagers see an American walking through My Lai and hear them talking, they will feel nauseated, like when they smell a disgusting rotten odor.
@farlentehanbac
@farlentehanbac 2 года назад
Irak and afganistan to 😊
@user-yx9bs8zo5q
@user-yx9bs8zo5q Год назад
We need a special on the 5000 civilians murdered by the VC and NVA in Hue city. And the many atrocities at the end of the war.
@memecoinalpha
@memecoinalpha Год назад
South Vietnam retook the city and killed civilians and then the US bombed even more
@fiendish67
@fiendish67 Месяц назад
We've heard about it for the last 50 years. You should pay better attention.
@charlesdolphinboy
@charlesdolphinboy Год назад
unaccountable to this day * evil hides in plain sight * and war is still an option * where from here i wonder * rest in peace 🙏 🕯🏵
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