Viet xuan luong photos

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Third Generation Artist: Vietnam’s Post-War Socialist Realism

Lương Xuân Đoàn was born in a French maternity hospital (nhà hộ ) on Nguyễn Thái Học Street in Hanoi on 17 June 1952 and grew up in a cultured home environment. His mother owned a successful children’s tailoring company, while his father worked for the Democratic Republic of Vietnam’s (DRV) Central Hồ Chí MinhCommunist Youth Union (Trung ương đoàn niên cộng sản Hồ Chí Minh). Many of his extended family members worked in artistic spheres, most notably his uncle, Lương Xuân Nhị, a famous Vietnamese artist. Throughout his childhood, Lượng Xuống Núi taught Đoàn drawing and painting, giving him a wealth of education that he lacked in school.

 “The soldiers’ private world isn’t contrary to their fighting lives. It’s constraint and hardness in battles make them dream about nice things in the future.”

Interview with Lương Xuân Đoàn at the Sofitel Plaza Hotel in Hanoi by Witness Collection, 5 May 2008

Early Education

Due to the Second Indochina War, Đoàn moved schools constantly as a boy and as a

First US general of Vietnamese descent recalls harrowing escape from war

WASHINGTON -- On a spring day in 1975, 9-year-old Viet X. Luong huddled with his family on a hot tarmac. He trembled as bombs landed near crowds of Vietnamese who had gathered at Tan Son Nhat Airport to escape the war that tore their nation apart.

His father, an executive officer in the South Vietnamese Army, tried to comfort his seven children, as they lay flat on the tarmac ground.

“Kids don’t worry,” Luong recalled what his father said in Vietnamese. “You’ll be OK.”

His father’s words reassured him, but only for a moment. North Vietnamese forces had engaged in a full assault on the airport shortly before the fall of Saigon. Mortar and artillery fire thundered just outside of the terminals. He could hear the hum of North Vietnamese aircraft as they circled and bombed the tarmac.

“All hell broke loose,” he said Monday during a livestream event. “I was scared to death.”

Amid screams of pain and terror of Vietnamese struck by the barrage, Luong fervently began reciting the Hail Mary. In the days befo

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