Wednesday, April 27, 2011

??? Welcome Home Vietnam Veteran Commemoration Event ???

            In the last post this blog outlined a reolution in the Senate to establish March 30th of this year as Welcome home Vietnam Veterans Day. For ourselves and for several other Veteran collaborators this left us with a jumble of ideas that we have come to put together here on this blog. To those of your reading this blog we ask a question to open the floor for your input into an open discussion between other Veterans and civilians alike who have perspective on this topic. Our question is this: 

Should we hold an event in August in Providence, RI to commemorate "Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day"?

            All ideas are welcome and no comment on the topic will go unappreciated. Please raise your voices, and keyboards, to let us know your thought. To start off, perhaps you can send us a comment on your experince with these types of event and so that we can test the waters, let us know, would you attend an event aimed at welcoming home, at along last, our Vietnam Veterans in the dignified and heartfelt way they so deserve?

March 30th: “Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day”


Mar 17 2011
Published by MessageCenter at 2:47 pm under Events

                   The U.S. Senate yesterday declared March 30th as “Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day,” agreeing unanimously to a resolution introduced by Senator Richard Burr (R-N.C.), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs.

                    On March 30, 1973, all U.S. troops withdrew from Vietnam under the terms of the Treaty of Paris. This March 30th, the Senate has encouraged Americans across the country to recognize Vietnam Veterans for their sacrifice and demonstrate a warm welcome to these soldiers who returned from war to a politically divided country.
“I’m pleased that the Senate has agreed to set aside a day to give our Vietnam Veterans a warm, long-overdue welcome home. I strongly encourage communities throughout North Carolina and across the country to observe this day with activities and events that honor these Veterans for their service. It’s time they receive the recognition they have earned and deserve. This day also provides our nation with an important teaching moment. Never again should our men and women serving in the armed forces receive the same treatment as those returning from Vietnam,” said Senator Richard Burr.

                    Senator Burr introduced the resolution for the second consecutive year on February 16, 2011. Read Senator Burr’s remarks on the introduction of the resolution.  

                    The United States became involved in Vietnam because policy-makers believed that if South Vietnam fell to a communist government, communism would spread throughout the rest of Southeast Asia. The US Armed Forces began serving in an advisory role to the South Vietnamese in 1961, and in 1965, ground combat troops were sent into Vietnam. On March 30, 1973, after many years of combat, all US troops withdrew. More than 58,000 members of the United States Armed Forces lost their lives and more than 300,000 were wounded in Vietnam.
Senators John Boozman (R-AR), Thad Cochran (R-MS), James Inhofe (R-OK), and Johnny Isakson (R-GA) and Mike Johanns (R-NE) co-sponsored the legislation. The resolution now moves to the House of Representatives for consideration.