ID | 128426 |
Title Proper | Isle of light |
Other Title Information | look back at the boat people and the European left |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ai, Vo Van |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | We were sitting in a cafe on the Left Bank in Paris in November 1978 when the news broke that two thousand five hundred and sixty-four Vietnamese were stranded off the coast of Malaysia on a rusty cargo ship, the Hai Hong. They had fled Vietnam in a desperate attempt to seek freedom and asylum overseas. After sixteen days on the South China seas, buffeted by storms, crushed by the heat, with no more food or water, they had arrived on the shores of Indonesia, then Malaysia, only to be pushed back by the coast guards. They had nowhere to land, and the ship could go no further. Stranded and helpless, starving and totally dehydrated, they were dying before our eyes as they unfurled a makeshift banner in English across the side of the ship: "UN please save us." |
`In' analytical Note | World Affairs US Vol.176, No.6; March-April 2014: p.38-46 |
Journal Source | World Affairs US Vol.176, No.6; March-April 2014: p.38-46 |
Key Words | Cold War ; Vietnam ; South Vietnam ; Antiwar ; Paris's Antiwar ; Communist Victors ; Malaysia ; South China Sea ; US Peace Dilemma ; Asia Pacific ; Europe ; Central Asia ; France ; China ; Indonesia ; United States - US ; War ; Refugee |