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Tran Van Dinhs experience with the American soldiers returning to Vietnam
to deactivate landmines left by the United States military offers a powerful
model for thinking about ways to work for reconciliation and healing in
the aftermath of conflict and violence. More than simply an interesting
exchange, the encounter offers an insight into a model of profound importance.
Compassionate Concern for the Other
The story of the soldiers’ return to Vietnam begins with their hearing
a story on TV about how Vietnamese peasants were getting killed and maimed
by the legacy of the landmines that were left from the Vietnam war. Rather
than simply turning the channel, or filing this story in the back of their
minds along with the dozens of other tales of suffering that one hears
in a day, the former soldiers felt a deep sense of compassion and connection
with the plight of a people who had once been labeled as an enemy, an
Other.
A Sense of Personal Responsibility for Righting a Wrong
Even beyond the general sense of compassion the soldiers felt, what makes
their response a model of hope is the fact that they felt personally responsible
to make amends for the suffering of the Vietnamese peasants because their
suffering was the direct result of previous actions on the part of the
U.S. forces. Their connection to those same forces led to a feeling of
direct responsibility to address the problem, and they took it upon themselves
to right the wrongs that were still causing harm decades after the conflict
had ended.
Deactivating the Violence of the Past to Restore Hope to the
Future
The soldiers returned to the battlefields of Vietnam with one concrete
goal in mind: digging up the remaining land mines in the countryside of
Vietnam so no more people would be hurt. But their actions also stand
as a symbolic gesture and an elegant metaphor for any number of efforts
to promote healing and reconciliation. Sometimes the land mines of the
past are public policies that institutionalize inequalities, or crimes
left unsolved, or harms inflicted without reparation. Those who wish that
others would simply “move on” from past injustices would be
wise to learn from this model, and make sure that the violence inflicted
in past times has been properly deactivated in the fields on which we
would construct a new future.
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