Mai sau, đến đời con, đời cháu chúng ta, xin hãy giải thích những tấm hình này bằng một từ ngữ đơn giản : CHẠY GIẶC !
Giặc là ai ?
Tại sao phải chạy ?
Tại sao mình gọi chúng nó là giặc ?
Chúng nó từ đâu đến ?
Chúng nó đến đây để làm gì ?
Hãy cho con cháu chúng ta biết thêm ... chứ không vỏn vẹn chỉ hai chữ VietNam War

19 Mar 1975, Dau Tieng, South Vietnam --- Villagers flee down highway as Communists advance in Dau Tieng, 35 miles north of Saigon. Blown-up bridges blocked 3/19 the escape route for a convoy of an estimated 250,000 persons from Pleiku and other towns in the central highlands, abandoned at the order 3/18 of South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
21 Apr 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- The first rocket attack hit Saigon at 4:30, striking the town center and setting fire to 150 wooden houses. Fourteen died and over forty people were injured in the attacks. Inhabitants of Saigon wake up to the devastation of war. --- Image by © Jacques Pavlovsky/Sygma/CORBISVC pháo kích vào SG những ngày gần cuối cuộc chiến

28 Apr 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- 4/28/75-Saigon, S. Vietnam- Soldier hangs on to his wounded comrade as they both stay flat on the pavement of the Newport Bridge during a Communist attack here 4/28. Insurgents shot their way into a (USAID) warehouse, which later was in flames along with government fuel dump. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
28 Apr 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- A government soldier helps his wounded buddy on the Newport Bridge during fighting with Communist insurgents. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBISXe tang Bac Viet bi ban chay tai Lang Cha Ca gan san bay TSN

1-5-1975 - DS My tren hang khong mau ham

21 Apr 1975, Vung Tau, South Vietnam --- Refugees flee the seaside resort of Vung-Tau (formerly Cap St. Jacques), Vietnam during the Fall of Saigon. --- Image by © Jacques Pavlovsky/Sygma/CORBIS12 Apr 1975, Tay Ninh, South Vietnam --- 4/12/1975-Tay Ninh, South Vietnam: A South Vietnamese woman cries over the death of her husband after Communist rockets hit this city some 50 miles northwest of Saigon. Shelling of Tay Ninh resumed over the past three days after a 15-day pause. Many families had returned; now they will have to flee again. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
21 Apr 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- The first rocket attack hit Saigon at 4:30, striking the town center and setting fire to 150 wooden houses. Fourteen died and over forty people were injured in the attacks. Inhabitants of Saigon wake up to the devastation of war. --- Image by © Jacques Pavlovsky/Sygma/CORBIS
12 Apr 1975, South Vietnam --- Killed While Fleeing. Highway I, S. Vietnam: The search for safer ground continues in South Vietnam where enemy rocket fire caused the death of one of the many who are fleeing their homes in the face of advancing Communist troops. These civilians move down Highway I from Xuan Loc where government and enemy troops are engaged in heavy fighting. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
14 Apr 1975, Near Houng Loc, South Vietnam --- Houng Loc, South Vietnam: Crippled boy pushes his wheelchair along Highway One, April 14, 1975, near Houng Loc, 28 miles north of Saigon. Refugees flee down this road daily hoping to reach safety in Saigon. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
13 Apr 1975, Xuan Loc, South Vietnam --- Bombs explode in background, and a mother hurries her children from Xuan Loc, 4/13, as Communist firepower pounds the city. Reports from the field 4/19 said the defenders continued to hold Xuan Loc, but that heavy North Vietnamese reinforcements have moved into the battle for the city, now in ruins. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
April 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- A street congested with traffic as refugees flee in automobiles to Saigon near the end of the Vietnam War, South Vietnam. --- Image by © Nik Wheeler/CORBIS
April 1975, Bien-hoa, South Vietnam --- A street congested with traffic as refugees flee in automobiles to Saigon near the end of the Vietnam War. --- Image by © Nik Wheeler/CORBIS
04 Apr 1975, Saigon, South Vietnam --- Refugees from
No comments:
Post a Comment