Showing posts with label Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Recognize Vietnam Veterans with “Welcome Home” Day March 29

Reminder: March 29, 2012 Vietnam Veterans Day
Presidential Proclamation -- Vietnam Veterans Day
VIETNAM VETERANS DAY
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION

On January 12, 1962, United States Army pilots lifted more than 1,000 South Vietnamese service members over jungle and underbrush to capture a National Liberation Front stronghold near Saigon. Operation Chopper marked America's first combat mission against the Viet Cong, and the beginning of one of our longest and most challenging wars. Through more than a decade of conflict that tested the fabric of our Nation, the service of our men and women in uniform stood true. Fifty years after that fateful mission, we honor the more than 3 million Americans who served, we pay tribute to those we have laid to rest, and we reaffirm our dedication to showing a generation of veterans the respect and support of a grateful Nation.

The Vietnam War is a story of service members of different backgrounds, colors, and creeds who came together to complete a daunting mission. It is a story of Americans from every corner of our Nation who left the warmth of family to serve the country they loved. It is a story of patriots who braved the line of fire, who cast themselves into harm's way to save a friend, who fought hour after hour, day after day to preserve the liberties we hold dear. From Ia Drang to Hue, they won every major battle of the war and upheld the highest traditions of our Armed Forces.

Eleven years of combat left their imprint on a generation. Thousands returned home bearing shrapnel and scars; still more were burdened by the invisible wounds of post-traumatic stress, of Agent Orange, of memories that would never fade. More than 58,000 laid down their lives in service to our Nation. Now and forever, their names are etched into two faces of black granite, a lasting memorial to those who bore conflict's greatest cost.

Our veterans answered our country's call and served with honor, and on March 29, 1973, the last of our troops left Vietnam. Yet, in one of the war's most profound tragedies, many of these men and women came home to be shunned or neglected -- to face treatment unbefitting their courage and a welcome unworthy of their example. We must never let this happen again. Today, we reaffirm one of our most fundamental obligations: to show all who have worn the uniform of the United States the respect and dignity they deserve, and to honor their sacrifice by serving them as well as they served us. Half a century after those helicopters swept off the ground and into the annals of history, we pay tribute to the fallen, the missing, the wounded, the millions who served, and the millions more who awaited their return. Our Nation stands stronger for their service, and on Vietnam Veterans Day, we honor their proud legacy with our deepest gratitude.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 29, 2012, as Vietnam Veterans Day. I call upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities that commemorate the 50 year anniversary of the Vietnam War.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-ninth day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand twelve, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-sixth.
BARACK OBAMA


TEXAS
Dedication of Capitol monument honoring Texas Vietnam veterans set for Saturday

OHIO
VETERANS BEAT: AREA MARKS VIETNAM VETERANS DAY IN GARFIELD HEIGHTS

KANSAS
Ness County to honor veterans


Turn the Page from 2009
PTSD is like a movie playing in your head. One second you're where you are and the next, you are back in combat. Vietnam veterans are making that trip back to where they were almost 40 years ago. The fact they are still here, is a message to all combat veterans that needs to be understood. If Iraq and Afghanistan veterans want to know how they did it this long, all they have to do is ask. After all, Vietnam veterans came back and made sure there was help for veterans today.

Turn The Page of PTSD from Kathleen "Costos" DiCesare on Vimeo.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day in Alabama

Wiregrass Recognizes Vietnam Veterans at “Welcome Home” Day
WTVY News
Mar 16, 2014

Vietnam Veterans will be recognized and honored during the official Wiregrass Vietnam Veteran’s “Welcome Home” Day on Saturday, March 29th at 10a.m. The event will be held at the Westgate Library Branch at 535 Recreation Drive in Dothan, Alabama.

Mayor Mike Schmitz believes this is an important issue that needs to be honored and recognized by Wiregrass residents. One of his brothers served in Vietnam, and Mayor Schmitz remembered how the troops were treated when they returned from serving.
read more here

Monday, March 26, 2012

A big salute to Staten Island's Vietnam Vets

A big salute to Staten Island's Vietnam Vets
March 26, 2012
By Staten Island Advance

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- To recognize the sacrifices of those who served in the Vietnam War, state Sen. Andrew Lanza and Assemblyman Matthew Titone joined veterans and elected officials yesterday afternoon at the fourth annual Vietnam Veterans Day Celebration.

In 2008, Lanza (R-South Shore) and Titone (D-North Shore) authored legislation designating March 29 as Vietnam Veterans Day in the state of New York after hearing the stories of Vietnam veteran Lester Modelowitz.
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Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day attracts crowd

Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day attracts crowd

March 26, 2012

The Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day attracted hundreds of people Sunday to Guadalupe for a ceremony, barbecue and more.

The Central Coast Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 982 organized the third annual event, which this year included unveiling the signs naming a segment of Highway 1 as the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Highway.
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Vietnam veterans to be honored at Homecoming in Charlotte

Vietnam veterans to be honored at Homecoming in Charlotte
March 26, 2012
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — North Carolina residents who served in Vietnam will be honored at a special event in Greensboro this week.

The USO of N.C., Charlotte Motor Speedway and N.C. Association of Broadcasters have worked together to organize the Vietnam Veterans Homecoming Celebration for military members and their friends and family.

The event, which was announced last December as the first of its kind in the region, is set to be held at Charlotte Motor Speedway on March 31.
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Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans event held in Tulare

Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans event held in Tulare
Mar. 25, 2012

Written by
DAVID CASTELLON


Post of colors by the Tule River Native Veterans Post 1987 and the Blood River Drum group and Joey Garfield of Native Blessing during the welcome home Vietnam Veterans Day program hosted by Central Valley Vietnam Veterans on Saturday at the Tulare Veterans Memorial building. Michael Alvarez
A little rain didn't stop Valley veterans from honoring Vietnam War veterans Sunday in Tulare.

Plans were to hold the Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans event at Veterans Park in Tulare, but with a strong storm approaching over the weekend, organizers arranged Saturday to move it indoors, inside the neighboring Tulare Memorial Building

Despite the rain, the event drew about 500 people — well above the 300 to 400 estimated to have attended last year in the park, said Kent McNatt, a Tulare native and one of the event's organizers.

Sunday marked the third year in a row that Central Valley Vietnam Veterans has put on the event in Tulare.

The event was organized to support a 2009 proclamation signed by then-California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger designating March 30 as "Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day" in the state. That date signifies the date the last U.S. troops withdrew from Vietnam in 1973.
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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Vietnam veterans get an official welcome day

Vietnam veterans get an official welcome day
7:15 AM, Mar. 29, 2011
Written by
R. NORMAN MOODY
FLORIDA TODAY


When Franck Kaiser came home from the Vietnam War, a clerk fired obscenities at him instead of giving him change for $20 so he could call his family and let them know he was home safely.

Kaiser had arrived on a charter flight to Travis Air Force Base and was bused to San Francisco International Airport, where he would take another flight to get to Fort Hood, Texas, after being awarded three Purple Hearts for injuries suffered during a year at war.

Many Vietnam veterans encountered the same kind of hostility and indifference when they returned home to a nation deeply divided politically over the war.

On Wednesday, 36 years after the last Marines and others withdrew from Saigon, the nation will recognize "Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day," thanks to a resolution unanimously passed by the U.S. Senate.

It's not a national holiday, and some local veterans were caught unaware of the resolution in which the senators encourage Americans to recognize the sacrifices of Vietnam veterans.

"We weren't welcomed very well, so it's good that the Senate chose to recognize our homecoming," said Kaiser, 66, executive vice president and chief executive officer of the Home Builders and Contractors Association of Brevard. "I think its great."
read more here
Vietnam veterans get an official welcome day

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Are Vietnam Veterans ready to forgive

It's a good question. I know some have already forgiven and some never will. Then there are others writing once in a while commenting on the treatment of the new veterans coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan, just as they had the same emotions when Gulf War veterans came home to cheers, parades, full airport waiting areas and parties with "welcome home" banners. They believe these veterans deserve what they are getting, but most know it was because they were treated so badly, most of it is possible now for others. There are things we can never make up for and things time has only made worse for some, but to not try, to not reach out and prove to them how sorry we are, that would be an even bigger slap in the face to them.

Events like this are good but what would matter more to them is to be taken care of when they have carried the burdens deep inside for all these years. Many Vietnam veterans still don't know there is a name for what is wrong with them and there is help to heal. Many try to seek help at the VA but the lines are too long, claims too complicated and denials come fast. There used to be Veterans Centers they could go to when they didn't want to go to the VA, but there are not enough of them to go around. If we were really serious about making it up to them, we'd really take care of them.

Vietnam vets to gather for ‘welcome home’: Are they ready to forgive?
PAT SCHNEIDER The Capital Times

You’ve got to understand what it was like here at home during the Vietnam War. How rapidly society was changing. How deep and broad opposition to the war grew and how sharp the backlash was.

Soldiers returning from their time “in country” entered an altered landscape. The “Ballad of the Green Berets” was blown away by Jimi Hendrix’s “Star Spangled Banner” at Woodstock. Madras plaid button-downs bled into tie-dyed T-shirts. College students cut classes for anti-war protests, leaving a waft of marijuana smoke in their trail.

As protests spread and confrontations with police grew violent, some returning soldiers were met with taunts, and nobody postponed the revolution to welcome them home. Most often they were greeted with shrugs, veterans say today.

Jim Kurtz of Middleton recalls landing at Truax Air Force Base in Madison in 1967 when he came home from Vietnam, where he led an infantry platoon. “There was nobody there but my parents. From other people, it was apathy, like you had been in Chicago working or something.”

On May 21-23, Wisconsin Vietnam veterans are invited to gather at Lambeau Field in Green Bay for LZ (Landing Zone) Lambeau, what organizers are billing as a long-delayed “welcome home.” The event, sponsored by Wisconsin Public Television and state veterans agencies and organizations, began as a preview for a WPT documentary series on Vietnam veterans but has ballooned into a three-day affair with big names and big-time attractions. Packer great Bart Starr is set to appear, the traveling version of the powerful Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall will be erected, and military aircraft will fly over the staging ground.



LZ Lambeau set for May 21-23
Vietnam documentary on TV
Wisconsin Public Television and the Madison Public Library will offer a preview screening of “Wisconsin Vietnam War Stories,” a new WPT documentary, at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 12, at the Madison Public Library, 201 W. Mifflin St.

A discussion will follow with the documentary makers, the author of a companion book and Vietnam veteran Doug Bradley.

The three-part documentary featuring stories of veterans’ experiences on the battlefield and coming home will air at 8 p.m. on May 24, 25 and 26.

read more here

Are they ready to forgive

Friday, March 19, 2010

Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day

Vietnam veterans finally get their due

Monday ceremony part of day of honor
March 18, 2010 11:35:00 PM
By Howard Yune/Appeal-Democrat


For Vietnam War veterans, the first annual observance expressly in their honor is a chance to receive thank-yous deferred for decades.

Though belated, the ceremonies this month could undo some of the bitterness vented on U.S. soldiers in the late 1960s and give them the same appreciation given the veterans of other wars, predicted one of the observance's chief backers in the state.

"They were shocked. They didn't expect a heroes welcome, but they did expect to be treated like normal Americans," said Assemblyman Paul Cook, R-Yucca Valley, a 26-year Marine Corps veteran who served 13 months in Vietnam and co-wrote the Assembly bill to designate the day.

"It was a really bad time, and I think a lot of anger was directed toward veterans or anyone in the military — quite different from the attitude toward men and women serving today."

A Vietnam veteran in suburban Los Angeles, José Ramos, began petitioning cities and states a decade ago to give fellow veterans an observance distinct from Memorial Day and Veterans Day.

In September 2009, the Legislature passed a bill to recognize the day, and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed it into law. According to the Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day Organization, 11 other states have created observances for March 30 — the day in 1973 when the U.S. withdrew its last troops from the country, two years before communist North Vietnam's conquest of the south, which American forces had backed for more than a decade.
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Vietnam veterans finally get their due

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Vietnam War Vets Finally Get Their Homecoming

Vietnam War Vets Finally Get Their Homecoming, A Day in Their Honor

Posted: Sep 25, 2009 07:55 PM EDT


By Nathan Baca, News Channel 3 Reporter
nbaca@kesq.com

TWENTYNINE PALMS - California is giving Vietnam Veterans their due.

Friday at the Twentynine Palms Marine Base, Governor Schwarzenegger signed a bill creating "Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Day."

"We are gathering this morning to say to our Vietnam Veterans what should have been said a long time ago: Welcome home, welcome home, welcome home," said the governor.

Nearly 6,000 Californians were killed in Vietnam, but for those who came home alive, airport homecomings were often hostile.

Veteran Ralph Ford recalls, "We had to walk past the chain link fence into customs inspection. We were spat on and called all kinds of foul names. This day, today, is long, long overdue."
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Vietnam War Vets Finally Get Their Homecoming