Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 2, 2012

WE PROMISE ONE ANOTHER / POEMS FROM PRISON : PHAN CHU TRINH / Don Luce introduced ...

We  promise one another .
 /  Don Luce ... introduced ...


                                                P o e m s  f r o m  P r i s o n

                                                  In temporary set bach , those who mend the sky
                                                                        Do not  let minor things get them down
                                                                                     (  PHAN CHU TRINH )

          Most of Việtnam 's greatest heroes have spent  time in prison and there is an impressive tradition of prison poetry in Việtnam .  Phan Chu Trinh , a leader of the anti-colonial struggles at the turn of the century ,  spent time on the prison island of Côn Sơn .  Phan Bội Châu , another leader of the resistance to the French policy in Indochina ,  was imprisoned in Kwang tung ,  China .  Both wrotes articles and poems while behind prison walls .  Hồ Chí Minh was a prisoner of Chiang Kai-Shek's police in China in  August , 1942 to September, 1943 , a and wrote poems while he was in captivity .

         Today many of the 100,000 political prisonners in the jails of South Việtnam compose poems and songs to help pass the time and to keep themselves from going mad .   Since they are afraid to write them down ,  many prisoners carefully memorize long poems ,  and then commit them to paper if they released .

          The Thiệu regime uses many of  the prisons built by the French colonialists to repress those who oppose its policies .   From all reports officials of the Thiệu regime treat  their prisoners as inhumanely as the French authorities treated theirs in colonial days .  Prisoners are shackled for months ,  and many become paralyzed .  They suffer from chronic dysentery and other stomach disorders .  Beatings and torture are common .  Former prisoners have described water torture , the use of electrodes on sensitives parts of the body ,  and other tortures  ,  The laws of South Việtnam make it possible for a prisoner to be arrested and held for up to two years without trial ,  which is renewable ,  jail and never be tried .

            One of the most  feared of all South Vietnam's prisons is on Côn  Sơn Island .  It is located in the South China Sea  ,  approximately 140 miles southeast of  Saigon .   The prison  was established in 1862  by the  French .   Although Hồ Chí Minh was never imprisoned there ,  it was also called
 ' University of Hồ Chí Minh '  because  so many of its ' graduates '  changed  from a strong anti-communist position when they entered to joining the Việt Minh upon their release .  Now it is the Government of the Republic of South Việtnam ' s largest civilian prison ,  having  9,916 prisoners as of June , 1970 ,  according to the U.S. Public Safety Director in Việtnam .

           In June ,  1970 ,  Don Luce escorted Congressman Augustus Hawkins of the Los Angeles Watts area ,  Congressman William Anderson of  Tennessee and Thomas Harkin ,  a congressional  aide ,  to the prison on Côn Sơn .  Frank E. Walton ,  Director of the U.S. Public Safety program in Việtnam , and Colonel  Nguyễn Văn Vệ ,  Chief Warden of  Côn Sơn Prison  , accompanied them and were responsible for showing them around .  At the  beginning of the trip Mr. Walton said , ' This  ( place )  is like a Boy Scout Recreational  Camp ' .  Both he and Colonel   Vệ wanted the visitors to spend a lot of their time in the prisoner souvenir shop .  When  Mr. Harkin showed Colonel Vệ a list of prisons they would like to see ,  he became angry and said that is was not possible to see indivual prisons ,  without special permission from the Ministry of Interior .

             Finally ,  however ,  with the help of a map given to him by a former prisoner ,  Don Luce  was able to locate the tiger cages .  He saw a path between two walls which had some vegetables growing along it and remembered that this was where a former prisoner said there was a  door leading into the tiger cages .   Before Colonel Vệ could stop them ,  the Congressman . , Don Luce and Thomas Harkin ,  punded on the door  which was opened by a confused guard .  They went into the area of the tiger cages  .

           What they  saw was later well  published in newspaers around the world .  The prisoners showed scars where they had been shackled to an iron bar at the  base of their small cells .  Many of them were paralized from the waist down  and could not stand .   Don Luce spoke  to them in Vietnamese and they complained of being beaten ,   of not having enough to eat , and of having lime thrown on them when they talked .    The lime stung their eyes and was causing blindness in some.

            After the existence of the tiger cages was made public ,  the American Mission and the Thiệu  Government announced that steps were being taken to improve the conditions at Côn Sơn  .   Later ,   because ,  it was disclosed that the American construction company of Raymond ,  Morisson  , Knutson- Brown ,  Root and Jones was building new ' isolation cells ' under a contract with the U.S. Government .  These new cells are costing the American taxpayers  $ 400,000 .
 []
( Don Luce 's note )

                                    B r e a k i n g   R o c k s    o n    C ô  n    S ơ  n
                                                       By     P H A N  C H U   T R I N H  

                       Phan  Chu Trinh  was a key figure in Vietnamese anti-colonial struggles at the
                       turn of the century .  He attempted to liberate Vietnamese from the feudalism
                       of the Mandarin system and perpare the way for a new nationalism .  Heavily
                       influenced by European Enlightenment thinking ,  he argued against a violent
                       confrontation with France  and was hopeful that an acceptable agreement could be
                       worked out      with France without bloodshed .  Nevertheless ,  he was accused of
                       inciting rebellion and sent to the prison island of Côn Sơn in 1908 ,  where he
                       remained until 1911 .  Although due to his notoriety he received some   special
                        privileges    while at Côn Sơn ,  he had to break rocks for building roads with
                       all the other  prisoners .  He also supposedly ruffled French  authorities
                        by refusing to talk to the  French  prison director unless he was invited to sit down .*
                          [] 
                               ( DON LUCE ' s not e ) .

                       ------
                                     Information on Phan Chu Trinh was taken  from ' Vietnamese Anti- Colonialism ' ,
                                       by David   C. Marr ,  University of  California Press , Berkeley , Calif., 1971 .


                                   
                                    
                                    As a man  standing upright on Côn Sơn
                                    I can being mountains crashing down in pieces .
                                    With my hammer I shatter heap after heap ,
                                    All my strength producing hundreds more stones ,
                                    Day  in ,  day out I make light of my exhausted body ,
                                    In rain or shime my heart never fails .
                                    In temporary setback ,  those who mend the sky
                                    Do not let minor things get them down !
                                        (  poem by PHAN CHU TRINH )

                                                                   

                                          P o em s  b y   H ồ  C h í   M i n h

                                            TUNG  CHUN  PRISON

                                   Tung Chin  prison ,  Ping Ma prison :  the same thing .
                                   Rice thin in tiny bowls ,  the stomach shrinks ,
                                   But at least there 's water and light
                                   And twice a day they open the bars and let the air in .

                                             ON   THE  WAY  TO   NANNING

                                             The supple rope  has  now been replaced with iron fetters ,
                                             At every step they jingle like jade rings .
                                             Though a prisoner ,  accused of being a spy ,
                                              I move with all the dignity of an ancient government official .

                                              PASTORAL  SCENE

                                              When I  came   the rice was  pale green .
                                              Now it 's cut in the barns ..
                                              Peasants laugh
                                              I hear them , here ,  across the rice fields .
                                                 ( poem by HỒ CHÍ MINH ) 

                                      -----
                                   (  from  WE PROMISE ONE ANOTHER  /  poems
                                                 from an  Asian war - Don   Luce ,  John C.  Schafer 
                                                 & Jacquelyn Chagnon  selected, translated -                            
                                                 Published by The Indochina Mobile Education
                                                 Project ,  Washington , D. C. 1971 -  
                                                  p. 94 - 98 ).                                                

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