Growing up is life’s hardest journey. When that long march begins without parents, with death and hunger your constant companions, that road is not just steep: it’s a mountain without passes. The reward for survival is another day filled with terror and uncertainty. For an orphan in a war zone, there is no victory—just a prayer that you find peace before the grave.
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The only surviving picture of me, Quang, with Papa and his siblings taken shortly before he left for Hong Ngu assignment -
Grandmother, Thuy and Van -- at Saigon Zoo with Aunt Que, her cousin, her children, Ngoc, Lien, Duc, Thang -
Bubba and his new barking toy - stucco home, Phu Nhuan 1967 -
My adopted parents Uncle Al, my mother's sister Aunt Thu, and her son little Bubba, 1968 -
Uncle Al & Aunt Thu behind the register counter at Albert's restaurant, Philippines - 1969 -
Don't cry Sissy, this song is for you... your little brother, Bubba -
Quang, cousin Ngoc, Bubba and fish farm hired hands at work butchering a pig -
Quang 1973 -
My two best friends from the 3rd and 5th grades - Thom (left) and Cuc (right) -
The reason why Uncle Hai's uniform is so white is because I was not allowed to touch it -
Beautiful Mo Nga, Uncle Hai's wife before their marriage -
Uncle Chieu - 1991 -
Grandma Mau smoking her favorite cigarette at Vung Tau Beach - 1991 -
Mother and little Quang -
Papa and Uncle Thanh as young men -
My dearest Grandpa Phan and Grandma Mau -
"Sisters"... Mama and Aunt Thu -
Office of the People (Town Hall), Hong Ngu - 2011 -
Papa's old post located at the border of Hong Ngu and Cambodia. This bridge connects the two countries -
Home of an old soldier, whom I was told was a survivor of the 1964 battle at Hong Ngu. Which side? It no longer matters. Today it is one Vietnam -
Back in 1964, this place was the the aid station -
Home along Saigon river -
Hong Ngu Market established in 1962 -
Ronnie Choat -
The only soldier with a gun that didn't scare me. Oh, I can still fit into these clothes by the way.