SAN JOSE — Some supporters draped yellow flags of the former
South Vietnam over their shoulders while others joined hands and held back
tears as San Jose became the first Bay Area city to ban the flag of the
communist Socialist Republic of Vietnam on city flagpoles.
Councilman Tam Nguyen, who fled communism in his native
Vietnam when he was 19 and proposed the idea, got emotional when the unanimous
vote was cast after a lengthy debate late Tuesday night.
“It shows we understand the pain of our community,” Nguyen
said after the City Council meeting. “It gives us a chance to heal. We are no
longer oppressed. We are really free now and we can sleep at night.”
The highly charged debate Tuesday pitted two factions of the
city’s Vietnamese-American community against each other: Older generations of
Vietnamese refugees who escaped communism and younger immigrants who identify with
their country’s current national flag.
San Jose ceremonially raises cultural flags on its flagpoles
at City Hall throughout the year. Although no requests were made to fly the
Vietnamese flag, city leaders aimed to curb the possibility. Nguyen said the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam flag — red with a gold star — symbolizes
oppression and bloodshed. Some compared it to raising the Nazi flag.
“We speak up on behalf of those who have lost their lives,”
said San Jose resident Khanh V. Doan, a U.S. Army veteran. “Please do not allow
that bloody flag to exist in this city. It is our nightmare.”
Daniel Nguyen, another San Jose resident, said Vietnamese
people “lost our country, lost our husbands, our wives and children because of
that communist flag.”
After hours of emotional testimony, the City Council
approved Nguyen’s flag ban and reaffirmed the city’s recognition of the
“Vietnamese Heritage and Freedom Flag” as the official flag of San Jose’s
Vietnamese-American community. That’s the yellow flag with three horizontal red
stripes that represented the former Republic of Vietnam, the “South Vietnam”
the U.S. backed in its battles against communist insurgents before it fell in
1975.
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