Eents in the Life of a
Revolutionary Leader
1890 On
May 19, HO Chi Minh was born the second son to a family of farmers living in
Kim Lien, a small village in Annam (Central Vietnam). He was born NGUYEN Sinh
Cung but later adopted the name Ho Chi Minh (“He who enlightens”).
When Ho Chi Minh was born in
1890, Vietnam was under French control. The French had split what is known
today as Vietnam into three separate states — Cochin China (South Vietnam),
Annam (Central Vietnam), and Tonkin (North Vietnam). In 1887, France combined
these three states with Cambodia, also under French control, to form a
federation of states called Indochina. Later, in 1893, Laos would also be
incorporated into Indochina. Of the four states, France directly governed only
Cochin China, but it indirectly controlled the other regions of Vietnam through
a colonial administration that governed the entirety of Indochina as a single
unit. The people living in French Indochina had little influence in the
administration of their government and few rights. Vietnam was the jewel of the
French colonial crown, providing ample natural resources and abundant cheap
labor.
1907 After
receiving a primary education at a local school, Ho and his brother traveled to
the city of Hué to attend a prestigious Franco-Vietnamese academy. Three years
later, Ho left the academy before graduating and worked briefly as a
schoolteacher in the town of Phan Thiet.
1911 Ho
traveled to Saigon and obtained a job as a cook aboard a French steam ship
bound for the French city of Marseille. Although the details of his journey are
not well documented, Ho spent the next two years traveling around the world,
visiting cities in Europe, Asia, North America, and, according to some
accounts, Africa and South America as well. Ho eventually settled in London.
1917 Ho
moved to Paris during the height of World War I. He adopted the name NGUYEN Ai
Quoc (“Nguyen the Patriot”) and became involved in leftist and anti-colonial
activism.
1919 Ho
worked to found the Association for Annamite Patriots, an organization composed
of Vietnamese nationals living in France who opposed the French colonial
occupation of Vietnam. He authored a petition demanding the end of the French
colonial exploitation of Vietnam, which he attempted to present to the world
powers at the Versailles Peace Conference held in the aftermath of World War I.
His petition was never officially recognized, but his effort was well known in
Vietnam.
1920 Ho
became a founding member of the newly created French Communist Party.
1922 Ho
founded the journal Le Paria (The Pariah), which served as a venue for
anti-colonial activists to express and disseminate their views about the French
colonial regime.
1923
Ho traveled to Russia for the first time. After subsequent visits,
he became acquainted with the most influential Soviet leaders including Nikolai
BUKHARIN, Leon TROTSKY, and Joseph STALIN. While in Russia, Ho was trained as
an agent of the Comintern*. He studied the thought of Marx and Lenin as well as
organizational and revolutionary techniques.
*Founded in 1919 by Vladimir Ilyich LENIN in the aftermath of the
Russian Revolution of 1917, the Comintern was dedicated to organizing an
international socialist movement. Comintern agents were deployed throughout the
world, promoting revolution, socialism, and organizing communist branch
organizations abroad.
1925 Ho
traveled to China where he worked closely with Mikhail BORODIN, a fellow
Comintern agent, to foment socialist revolution in China. While in China, Ho
formed the Thanh Nien Cach Menh Dong Chi Hoi (“Revolutionary Youth League”),
later known simply as Thanh Nien (“Youth”), an organization composed of
Vietnamese exiles living in China and dedicated to revolution in Vietnam. As
the Than Nien steadily grew in size, the organization began to establish
connections with other Vietnamese nationalist and revolutionary groups residing
in Vietnam. Thanh Nien also published the revolutionary journal Than Nien,
which was secretly distributed throughout Southeast Asia.
1927 Ho
was forced to leave China after CHIANG Kai-shek, the leader of the Nationalist
Party (Guomindang), instituted a vicious crackdown on left-wing radicals,
imprisoning and executing hundreds of communists and labor activists. Ho fled
to the Soviet Union. He spent the next few years based in Russia, but made
frequent trips to China to recruit members for Thanh Nien.
1930 In
Hong Kong, Ho founded the Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP), later renamed the
Indochinese Communist Party (ICP).
1931 Ho
was arrested in Hong Kong by British authorities for his involvement in
revolutionary activities and was imprisoned for two years. After he was
released, Ho returned to Moscow where he would remain until 1938.
1938 Ho
traveled to China to serve as a military advisor for the Chinese Communist
Party after the Japanese invasion of China in 1937. The Chinese Communist Party
and the Guomindang, previously entangled in civil war, had agreed to an
armistice until the Japanese were defeated.
1940 German
forces invaded France.
Japanese forces moved into
Vietnam. French colonial authorities agreed to allow Japanese occupation under
the condition that the French colonial administration not be dismantled.
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1941 Ho returned to
Vietnam for the first time since he left the country in 1911. There, he founded
the Viet Nam Doc Lap Dong Minh (“League for the Independence of Vietnam”),
later known as simply the Viet Minh, an organization composed of Vietnamese
nationalist and communist groups committed to Vietnamese independence.
Throughout the Japanese occupation of Vietnam, the Viet Minh fought against
both French colonial authorities and the Japanese forces occupying Vietnam.
1942 Ho was arrested by Nationalist
Party (Guomindang) authorities in China and briefly imprisoned. Ho began to use
the pseudonym Ho Chi Minh (“He who enlightens”) by which he is now remembered.
1945 At the close of World War II, Ho
Chi Minh organized the Viet Minh to foment a large-scale uprising in Vietnam.
The Viet Minh captured major cities across Vietnam and declared Vietnam an
independent state. Vietnam became known as the Democratic Republic of Vietnam,
and Ho Chi Minh became its first president.
In July and August, the Allied Powers
met in Berlin for the Potsdam Conference and agreed to partition Vietnam into a
Northern and a Southern region. In the aftermath of the war, the administration
of Northern Vietnam was temporarily given to Nationalist China while the
administration of Southern Vietnam was temporarily given to the British. The
British allowed French troops to reenter South Vietnam in the belief that
retention of the profitable colony was essential to the recovery of the postwar
French economy.
1946 Ho Chi Minh signed an agreement
with the French that Vietnam be recognized as an Independent state, under the
condition that it become of a member the French Union and permit a small French
military presence. This agreement proved tenuous as tensions rose between
French colonists and Vietnamese nationalists, eventually leading to full-scale
war between the French and Vietnamese.
1951 The Vietnamese Workers Party (Lao
Dong), the successor to the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP), was founded.
1954 Vietnamese forces defeated the
French at at Dien Bien Phu, marking the collapse of French power in Vietnam. At
the Geneva Conference, a meeting of the major powers involved in the region, it
was decided that Vietnam remain divided into a Northern region, now under Viet
Minh control, and the Southern region, under French control until a new South
Vietnamese government could be established. With U.S. support, NGO Dinh Diem
was appointed Prime Minister of the fledgling government of South Vietnam.
(Note: Although Ngo is the surname, this individual is commonly referred to as
“Diem.”)
1955 The U.S. began giving military
aid to the Diem regime. Driven into hiding by Diem’s repressive policies,
communists living in South Vietnam organized into underground
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groups and began
to wage guerrilla war against the Diem regime. These insurgents came to be
known as the Viet Nam Cong San (“Viet Nam Communists”), or simply the Viet
Cong.
1960 Communist insurgents in South
Vietnam formed the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam, also
known as the National Liberation Front (NLF). North Vietnam agreed to supply
the NLF with military aid and support. While Ho Chi Minh remained president of
North Vietnam, he withdrew from active decision-making due to failing health.
1961 The United States increased
military aid to Diem. Diem began to institute brutally repressive measures against
political dissenters, but remained unable to stamp out the Viet Cong
insurgency.
1963 Diem was killed in a coup staged
by military commanders who had lost faith in his ability to lead.
1964 American ships patrolling the
Tonkin Gulf were allegedly attacked by North Vietnamese vessels. While this
attack, known as the Tonkin Gulf Incident, was never reliably confirmed, the
U.S. committed to full war against the communist forces in Vietnam.
1965 The U.S. began a full military
campaign against the Viet Cong in South Vietnam. Direct U.S. involvement would
last until 1973.
1968 In a large military strike known
as the Tet Offensive, the Viet Cong retook many of the cities that had been
under U.S. occupation, even pushing so far as to get troops inside the grounds
of the American embassy in Saigon. While the Viet Cong sustained heavy losses,
the offensive exposed the weakness of the U.S. and South Vietnamese forces,
shifting U.S. public opinion and precipitating the U.S. seriously to consider
withdrawing their forces from Vietnam.
1969 Ho Chi Minh died on September 2
at the age of seventy-nine.
Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh
Due to domestic protests against U.S.
military involvement in Vietnam, the U.S. slowly began to pull its forces out
of Vietnam, completely withdrawing military support in 1973. Despite the
massive U.S. bombing raids that had crippled the infrastructure of North
Vietnam, the Viet Cong, now entirely under the direction of North Vietnam,
continued to combat South Vietnamese forces. In 1975, North Vietnam launched a
full-scale invasion of South Vietnam, routing its armies and toppling the South
Vietnamese government. In 1976, the country was officially united under a
communist government.
After its reunification, Vietnam began to expand its influence in Southeast
Asia, invading Cambodia, then moving into Laos. These aggressive actions
strained Vietnam’s relations with China, which entirely
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deteriorated
after subsequent border disputes. In the postwar years, Vietnam forged an
alliance with the Soviet Union, securing substantial Soviet aid to help rebuild
its war-ravaged country and modernize its economy. Despite Soviet aid, the
Vietnamese economy remained relatively stagnant. Today, while still controlled
by a communist government, Vietnam has undertaken a number of economic reforms
to promote international trade and stimulate its economy.
The Legacy of Ho Chi Minh
There is perhaps no greater hero to
Vietnam than Ho Chi Minh. He is remembered primarily for his lifelong battle
against great odds to build an independent and unified Vietnam. Saigon, the
former capital of South Vietnam, was renamed Ho Chi Minh City in his memory
after its capture by North Vietnamese forces in 1975.
References and Further Reading
Duiker, William J. Ho Chi Minh.
New York: Hyperion, 2000.
Fenn, Charles. Ho Chi Minh: A
Biographical Introduction. New York: Scribner, 1973.
Kobelev, Yevgeny. Ho Chi Minh.
Hanoi: The Gioi Publishers, 2000.
Lacouture, Jean. Ho Chi Minh: A
Political Biography. Trans. Peter Wiles. New York:
Random House, 1968.
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Who was Ho Chi Minh? Was he a kindly, patriotic man, who sought only freedom and self-determination for the people of Vietnam after decades of colonization and exploitation? Was he a cynical and manipulative schemer, who could seem caring while also tacitly allowing horrifying abuses of people under his command? Was he a hard-core communist, or was he a nationalist who used communism as a tool? Biography of Ho Chi Minh
By Kallie Szczepanski, Ab
http://asianhistory.about.com/od/vietnam/p/Biography-of-Ho-Chi-Minh.htm
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