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hi this is anita from the dusty roads
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podcast if any of you have been
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listening to me you know that i spend
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most of my time in hanoi vietnam and
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have lived here for quite a while i i'm
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actually working here in hanoi vietnam i
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you know travel throughout vietnam i
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have to say vietnam is a beautiful
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country and one thing that i've been
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noticing more especially over the years
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is how many more visitors are coming to
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vietnam it used to be when i first came
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here there were very few foreigners on
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the airplane and now there are many many
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people that have discovered vietnam and
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are traveling here because vietnam is a
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great place to travel and just a great
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place to see i want to talk a little bit
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about vietnam's past in particular how
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vietnam's war torn past shapes its
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you know vietnam is a very vibrant
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country today and many people have asked
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me because i'm an american and said
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"have you ever felt any animosity or
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have you ever felt fear for your life
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being an american and living in
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vietnam?" you know i first came to
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vietnam in the early 1990s before the us
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had any diplomatic relations here i
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later then moved here in 2000 so i've
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been here in vietnam or in and out of
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vietnam for many many years and i can
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honestly say that i have never felt my
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life in danger or felt any animosity
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because i was american i've never had a
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vietnamese say to me like "oh you're an
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american i hate you." because of what
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your people did to my people during the
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war in fact it has been very different
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it's been very welcoming
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the vietnamese people have been very
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kind and very generous that has always
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been one of the amazing things about
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vietnam and in asia in general that i've
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seen you know you look at a countries
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like japan japan that was you know
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bombed heavily by the americans during
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the world war ii you know basically they
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moved forward they didn't allow that to
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define their country or who they were
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vietnam has done the same from 1945 to
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vietnam endured 30 years of near
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constant warfare first came the battle
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against the french then the civil war
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between the north and south you know the
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cold war and then there became areas of
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the cold war you know with the you know
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the of course the americans were
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involved in that war and that's known as
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the american war by the vietnamese you
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know there became agent orange um the
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milelay massacre the ted offensive all
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these horrible things happened you know
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this was a chapter of time where
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terrible terrible things happened which
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many parts you know people are still
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paying for you know still paying for
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many of these things but what may
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surprise you vietnam doesn't dwell on
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the war they don't talk about the war
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they don't dwell on the war i lived in
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hanoi here and one of the streets i
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lived on there was this man that i
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always you know thought he looked like
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ho chi min had a little ho chi min beard
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i'm sure he fought in the war
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and he every day would walk with his
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little wheelchair i'm sure something
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happened to him in the war that made him
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that way he always smiled at me said
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hello no animosity at all i've lived and
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worked in vietnam for years and you know
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i like i've said i've always felt
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nothing but welcome so any of you that
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are out there thinking about do you want
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to come to vietnam as an american please
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do not hesitate you will find this to be
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and a wonderful place vietnam simply is
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not stuck in the past you know it hasn't
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erased it either you can still crawl
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through the the the chuchi tunnels
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outside ho chi min city visit war
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remnants museums where images of the war
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you know atrocities can be shown um you
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could take a tour of hanoi in a restored
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military jeep but once you step out of
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these you know created experiences you
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step into a country that's firmly facing
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forward and i think this is one of the
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great things and lessons that we can
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learn is this is the country which is
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facing forward they are not looking back
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at all walk down the street of hanoi and
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ho chi min and you'll see tech startups
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buzzing cafes electric motorcycles and
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teenagers filming tik tok vietnam's
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medium age is just above 30 so they have
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a population here about 95 million 97
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million close to close to 100 million
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but over half of it is just about the
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age of 30 so it's a very young
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population this is the nation that's
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driven by youth a generation born long
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after the bombs stopped falling but even
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the older generation that had the bombs
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falling on them are still not bitter
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either what's remarkable is how you know
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this generation teaches you not with
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ignorance but with perspective vietnam
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hasn't just rebuilt it's really it's
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really redefined itself
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you know it took the architectural bones
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that the french left behind colonial
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villas and they reshaped them you go to
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hanoi you beautiful downtown part of
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hanoi with many of the old french
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colonial buildings you know you can find
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many of these you know buildings with
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you know repurposed co-working spaces or
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trendy boutique hotels you know the past
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is not hidden it's just been repurposed
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there's also the cuisine which if you
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love food this is the place to travel
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vietnam is a great foodie capital great
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french bread great you know vietnamese
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food and ingredients is just very good
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so today vietnam is no longer a secret
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it is a place that's on many people's
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bucket list for travel it's a great
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place to visit great beaches great
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things to visit great things to see
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there's many things i've learned living
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in vietnam but you know some of the
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things i learned is that that the war
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does not dominate life young people here
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are still chasing their dreams cities
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are growing upward and a culture's eagle
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to share itself not shield itself i've
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never once felt unsafe i've never once
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been treated with hostility for being
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i've had meals in homes of peoples whose
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families fought on both sides of the war
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i work with people whose generations
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were whose grandparents were you know
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vietkong on the other side of the war
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the war may be part of their history but
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it's not their identity this is what
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makes vietnam different in many ways
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wiser they've been able to get over the
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war that i think in many way instances
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we as americans maybe have not been able
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to this is one of the things that i love
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i love the way that they've been able to
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forgive forget not really forget i
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wouldn't say forget but they've been
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able to forgive learn from the past and
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move on and that's one of the great
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strengths of this beautiful country if
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you'd like to be able to read more about
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this you can read my blog post on how
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vietnam's war torn past shapes its
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vibrant present and if you're
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considering to visit this country i
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highly recommend it it's a wonderful
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place to visit you'll come out and you
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will love it as much as i do you know
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