PDA

View Full Version : Ohio Homecoming Events to Mark Vietnam War



thedrifter
01-07-05, 10:16 AM
Ohio Homecoming Events to Mark Vietnam War
Published: 1/5/05

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - When Mike Jackson came back from Vietnam in 1972, he was met by ant-war protesters - not exactly a warm and fuzzy hello.

Now, 30 years after the war ended, Jackson is helping organize an event to finally welcome Vietnam veterans home.

"You've got a whole segment of the population that went through the same thing I did," said Jackson, who wrote a war memoir titled "Naked in Da Nang."

"I just want somebody to say thank you, somebody to say welcome home. It would mean a lot."

Jackson is spearheading Operation Welcome Home, a four-day celebration Veterans Day weekend in Las Vegas. A similar event, Operation Homecoming USA, is set for June in Branson, Mo. A highlight of both will be a parade.

There haven't been many ceremonies and parades over the years for the 7.9 million Vietnam veterans, though there was a homecoming parade 20 years ago in New York City that drew about 25,000 former soldiers.

Military historian J. Michael Wenger can't recall any official homecoming parades during or shortly after the war.

"The military was just ready to have it done with," said Wenger, of Raleigh, N.C., who also has written about the Vietnam War. "It would have been a publicity nightmare. It would have attracted protesters like a magnet."

Jackson, 57, vividly recalls his June 25, 1972, return to the United States. Anti-war protesters were at the airport in San Francisco to harass him and his fellow soldiers as they caught flights home.

"We walked a gantlet through these guys on either side of us, putting signs in front of your face and screaming at you," recalled Jackson, who flew 210 combat missions during the war. "This was our welcome home."

When he returned to his hometown of Tipp City, just north of Dayton, there were no parades or any official welcome-home events. People were pleasant, he said, but not one asked him about his Vietnam experience.

"Nobody wanted to hear it," he said.

Clinical psychologist Steven Herman said many Vietnam veterans feel that their service was meaningless because of the way they were treated when they came home. This year's homecoming events could ease those feelings, he said.

"At the very least, it would provide some validation," said Herman, who practices at the Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center in Indianapolis.

Gene McMahon is a Vietnam veteran and directs the Vets Journey Home, a program for his former fellow soldiers to vent traumatic wartime experiences.

The program has simulated homecomings for small groups of Vietnam veterans. McMahon said those homecomings that can be critical to helping them heal.

"They have a missing piece," he said.

McMahon appreciates this year's homecomings but questions whether the Las Vegas and Branson events will be able to heal the severe psychological wounds suffered by some veterans.

"It will be too little too late," he said. "It's deeper work than that."

Jackson calls the Las Vegas event a start.

"The time is right in the American psyche to do this," he said. "I think that there is a little bit of guilt in the American public on what did we do to these guys."

Branson organizer Gary Linderer, of Festus, Mo., agrees the homecomings are late but better than nothing.

"There are a lot of vets that are bitter and angry to this day," he said. "How do you apologize for what happened 30 years ago? This doesn't make up for it."

___

On the Net:

http://www.operationhomecomingusa.com/

http://vetsjourneyhome.dyndns.org/

Ellie

thedrifter
01-14-05, 10:26 AM
Vietnam vets to get 'true homecoming'
Grand-scale, weeklong event with 100,000 to say thank you

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 14, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

On the 30th anniversary of the end of the war, Vietnam veterans will be given the "homecoming celebration they never received" at a conference organizers hope will draw 100,000 people.

"During those three decades, the brave men and women who served in that conflict have never been given the recognition they deserve for their heroic sacrifices in service to our country," the organizers, Operation Homecoming USA, say in a statement.

"Now, the time for that recognition has come."

The board of directors for the first-ever national event, scheduled for June 13-19 in Branson, Mo., include entrepreneur and former presidential candidate Ross Perot, chairman emeritus of UPS Stores Jim Amos and NFL Hall of Famer Jackie Smith.

"By honoring those who answered their country's call during a difficult time in our nation's history, the legacy of duty, honor and country will be passed on to America's sons and daughters who will be called to serve in the future," the organizers say. "It's an idea whose time has come."

The weeklong tribute will be capped off by a festival of national acts, including the Oak Ridge Boys, the Fifth Dimension, the Temptations, the Supremes, the Beach Boys, Creedance Clearwater Revisited, Ann-Margret, Mary Wilson, Tony Orlando, Les Brown's Band of Renown with Les Brown, Jr., and the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders.

It also will feature a flyover of every type of aircraft used in the war.

During the week, smaller-scale reunions of veterans will be organized.

Operation Homecoming USA said it "approached a broad spectrum of national and regional experts to provide oversight of this sensitive project."

The event comes after a presidential election campaign that revisted some of the war's most contentious issues. But the spotlight on John Kerry's 1972 characterization of Vietnam servicemen as war criminals -- regarded as a major reason why they were scorned -- brought out many veterans publicly to help set the record straight and defend their honor.

A promotional video on the organizers' website says, "Over 3 million proud men and women served their country. Unfortunately, in the political debate, the Vietnam veteran was left on the battlefield."

The video says the idea for the conference began as a conversation between two Missouri veterans, Gary Linderer and Steve Presley.

Speaking at a news conference captured on the video, Amos said putting the event together is "a duty born out of love, and it is the right thing to do."

"What has remained for more than 30 years has been a hole in the heart of America," he said. "Now is the time for healing. Now is the time to welcome home the only veterans group that has never been officially welcomed home in American history."

The event, Amos said, will say "thank you to our fallen brothers and sisters on the other side of that wall. And, while its been a long time coming, to those Vietnam veterans on this side of the wall, welcome home."

Ellie