Small Wars Journal

Stories of Grief, Love and Penance Live Among What’s Left at the Vietnam Wall

Tue, 03/03/2015 - 7:47am

Stories of Grief, Love and Penance Live Among What’s Left at the Vietnam Wall by Michael E. Ruane, Washington Post

… The black and white snapshot of the seven enemy soldiers was left in a box at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial with a two-page letter.

The writer explained how he had grabbed the picture from the knapsack of a dead North Vietnamese soldier after cursing him, kicking him and firing into his corpse in a fit of rage.

The veteran, who was 20 at the time, in 1969, had lost a close friend in battle six days earlier, and his outfit had just ambushed and killed 40 enemy soldiers, including this one, in a “turkey shoot.”

Forty-two years later, the former “grunt” came to the Wall in Washington on a chilly fall morning. He put down the box and, weeping, read his letter aloud.

“I come here today in sadness and humility, the arc of my life having transformed me from the angry young man who desecrated your body to an older man seeking peace. . . . Please forgive me, my brother, and rest in peace.”

Experts are combing through items that have been left at the Vietnam Wall over the years for a planned education display.

Over the past three decades, the Wall has become a hallowed spot, a place of pilgrimage, homage and reconciliation. Now, some of the 400,000 items left there over the years by visitors are being selected for display in the new $115 million Vietnam War education center planned for a site nearby.

For the past 21/2 years, experts have been combing through the things that were left at the Wall since it was dedicated in 1982 and that were later stored in a National Park Service facility in Maryland.

Letters, dog tags, college rings, a football helmet, a motorcycle, posters, sneakers, cigars, medals and a piece of a helicopter rotor blade are among the things that make up what is now the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Collection.

They fill hundreds of bright-blue storage boxes stacked on long rows of shelves in the Park Service’s Museum Resource Center…

Read on.

Comments

My Marine cousin is panel/row 32W, 27. PFC Roger C. Nesbit, USMC.

Mark Pyruz

Tue, 03/03/2015 - 3:38pm

I visited the wall during a trip to DC in 2010. I placed a simple placard next to the wall bearing the image of my favorite Marine cousin, with a caption of remembrance. Very emotional experience.