Mind- and heart-blown. Dang Thuy Tram's is the real diary of Anne Frank: not a war propaganda forgery, but the raw actual notes of a courageous young woman harassed to death by massively criminal foreign armies (France, the United States) with a policy of chemical genocide against her and her people that is well-documented (see 'Kill Anything That Moves' by Nick Turse).
Also superior in merits to the Second World War Allied pamphlet, Dang Thuy Tram consciously chose to give up a comfortable and prestigious life as a physician in Hanoi, and committed to the sacred goal of helping expel a murderous invading force between 1966 and 1970. She heads a division of doctors rebuilding and managing frontline clinics, while the Americans burn them mercilessly one after the other with calculated precision and the help of local informants.
One of the most precious contributions of the book is the fact that it might be the only Vietnamese perspective about the war available in English, offering exclusive fragments of humanity of the Vietnamese resistance fighters and volunteers that Hollywood worked hard to dehumanize as thoroughly as possible. Hell, even American films, musicians and politicians claiming to criticize the Vietnam war did it only through the eyes of the invading soldiers and THEIR ailings. Yes, never mind the millions of Vietnamese they obliterated: none of them even has a name beyond the cunning "Viet Cong/Charlie" propaganda label. As if a sane human being would need to pledge allegiance to Communism to strongly disagree with the theft and raping of their land.
"Oh war! How I hate it, and I hate the belligerent American devils. Why do they enjoy massacring kind, simple folks like us?"
"Why are there such terrible, cruel people who want to use our blood to water their tree of gold? So much and still not enough for their greedy pockets, so much and still not enough to satisfy the foolish desire of the blood-thirsty devils."
Lines like these might explain why the diary of such an exemplary human being is not the one shoved down people's throats in Western educational systems, why such a strong, admirable and hard-working woman is no feminist's poster girl, and why several people seem to low-rate this gem of a historical document using lame excuses. For example, claims of a one-dimensional personality (typical in colonized minds that panic at the sight of non-colonized perspectives) are contrasted by Dang Thuy Tram's actual complex concerns and critique of her own society,
"The Revolution of the South! Many acts of heroism, many historic events, but also so much complexity and garbage in this society. It's easy to understand because with all our counter-the-Americans-save-the-country endeavors, we cannot yet focus our strength to rebuild our society, to teach our people how to behave and live in a civilized manner."
Finally, it was interesting for me that, as in the case of post-revolutionary Iran defending itself against the globally-backed Saddam Hussein, teenagers in Vietnam were also passionate about joining the defense efforts, willing to sacrifice their own lives for the freedom of their people,
"At fifteen Thien demanded to join the army. His mother didn't give him permission, but he was headstrong. He falsely added one year to his age, then followed a soldier to his unit."
Anti-Iran propagandists (e.g. Associated Press, Reuters, BBC, Marjane Satrapi, Masih Alinezhad, etc.) filled their mouths claiming the 'evil' Iranian clerics would promise teenagers "keys to heaven" and blackmail them in other ways to get them to join the war front as expendables. I wonder then, how did the Atheist Vietnamese managed to force their own teenagers to join the war? Again, that colonialist claim that you either have to be a Marxist or a coerced teenager to want to fight against the destruction of your dear ones and the theft of your land.
All in all, this is one book that every non-colonized mind must read with an open heart and I wholeheartedly recommend it to any such person.