On 16 March 1968, Mr Colburn found eight-year-old Do Ba clinging to his mother’s corpse in a ditch with the bodies of more than 100 people who had been mowed down. Nearly all the victims were women, children and the elderly.
"Today I see Do Ba with a wife and a baby," said Mr Colburn, a member of a three-man helicopter crew who intervened to stop the killing. "He’s transformed himself from being a broken, lonely man. Now he’s complete. He’s a perfect example of the human spirit, of the will to survive."
Mr Colburn, Mr Do and hundreds of others are gathering this weekend to remember the
Buddhist monks led the mourners in prayer on Saturday outside a museum that has been erected to remember the dead. An official memorial programme will be held today. Among those coming to pray was Ha Thi Quy, 83, a
Members of Charlie Company shot her in the leg and killed her mother, her 16-year-old daughter and her six-year-old son. Her husband later died of his injuries and another son had to have an arm and a leg amputated after suffering gunshot wounds that day. Ms Ha survived only because she was shielded beneath a pile of dead bodies.
To the villagers and many of the Americans who fought in
The massacre reminds Mr Colburn of the images of torture from Abu Ghraib prison in
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate