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| AGENT ORANGE
PROJECT |
Agent
Orange Project Photos
In March, 2005, the Madison Quakers implemented their first project
to help the victims of Agent Orange. Agent Orange, along with
Agents Purple, Pink, Blue, White and Green, were defoliants used
in Vietnam during the war. Agent Orange was by far the most heavily
used herbicidal spray during the war. These defoliants contained
dioxin a highly toxic chemical which caused severe birth defects
and high rates of cancer in those exposed to it-the Vietnamese
people and American soldiers, and our allies.
For those of us who have followed the debate over Agent Orange
all these years, we have seen a very familiar scenario-cries for
justice which go unheard, complete denial of responsibility by
the U.S. government and the corporations which produced Agent
Orange, anger unleashed and uncontrolled. And this reaction is
only in response to the mistreatment of American soldiers; the
effects of Agent Orange on the people of Vietnam have been virtually
ignored by the parties responsible. |

Father with his child, Dien Tho village, Nghe An province. His child
is severely deformed from genetic damage caused by his exposure
to Agent Orange during the American War. |

Mother with son affected by Agent Orange.
Dien Tho village, Nghe An province. |
While it is vitally important that awareness continues
to be raised about the need to address our responsibilities concerning
the after-effects of spraying the herbicide Agent Orange on our
soldiers and on innocent Vietnamese civilians, it is also important
that the anger and grief we all feel about the victims of this
abuse not devolve into pointless, mindless rage, as so often happens.
So, consistent with our approach to the massacres at My Lai and
elsewhere, we have chosen to take the path that bypasses recrimination
and anger and instead focuses on what we can do for the people
in Vietnam affected by Agent Orange. |
We began to do so in 2005 with the family of Mrs. Nguyen Thi
Ha from Tinh Giang village, one of the villages with a loan fund
program funded by our organization. Their household consists of
three women-grandmother, mother (Mrs. Ha) and daughter. The husband
of Mrs. Ha was sprayed with Agent Orange during the war. When
the war was over, they married; and, when he realized he had sired
a child with severe birth defects and that his wife was losing
her hearing, he ran away. He has not sent any money for support
and in fact has never been heard from since. |

Mrs. Ha with her mother. |

Mrs. Ha’s daughter.
She is fifteen years old in this photo. |
I spoke to Mrs. Ha's mother when I visited because Mrs. Ha
by then had become completely deaf. She showed me around their
“house”—mud walls, dirt floor and thatch roof.
Then she introduced me to her granddaughter, who was 15 years
old at the time but looked to be about 9 or 10 years old. She
can only respond to stimulus such as light or noise; other than
that, she has no sentience. One of the medical problems she has
is an insatiable craving for water, and so she consumes enormous
quantities of water all day long. Her grandmother told me that
she spends a large portion of her day just boiling water for her
granddaughter. And, of course, as a consequence of drinking so
much water, her granddaughter is urinating constantly. Her mother
and grandmother didn’t know hat more they could do for her.
In a house of mud, where can you put a child like this? They have
put her on a plastic chair with slots in the seat next to a door
so she can have some light and fresh air. Mrs. Ha and her mother
must work in the fields every day to be sure there is enough food
for the family. They can't be with her all day so this little
girl sat in her urine all day, day after day after day, her feet
caked with mud made from her urine. |
| Our response was to fund what the people of Vietnam call a
'compassion house' for the family of Mrs. Ha. These compassion
houses are made of durable brick and cement walls, cement floor
and tin roof.
There is no solution to the effects of Agent Orange. The genetic
damage is done and cannot be undone. But we can provide relief
for these families and that is our goal. For the first time in
their lives they are safe; safe from monsoon rains and wind, safe
from insects and snakes. And for the first time in their lives
they don’t feel so alone because they know now that someone
cares.
A meeting with the newly formed Vietnamese governmental organization,
the Organization for the Victims of Agent Orange, this year confirmed
the building of compassion houses as the most important aid that
can be given to victims of Agent Orange. As of October, 2006,
we have had constructed two more compassion houses for victims
of Agent Orange and we will be constructing many more in the near
future.
As of 2006 each compassion house costs $900. |

Mrs. Ha’s new house. |
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