Ho Chi Minh
Ho Chi Minh
Ho Chi Minh was born Nguyen Sinh
Cung in 1890. His father, Nguyen Sinh Huy, was a teacher who worked for French
colonists, before losing his job for refusing to learn the French language.
Nguyen Sinh Huy’s independent spirit was passed on to the young Nguyen Sinh
Cung and his siblings. As a teenager, the intrepid Nguyen Sinh Cung left
Vietnam on a world trip that took him to more than a dozen countries, including
the United States, Britain and France. Along the way he worked as a
kitchen-hand or waiter – despite being a qualified teacher – and encountered
many examples of poverty, exploitation or worker mistreatment.
In 1917 Nguyen Sinh Cung settled in
Paris, where he was exposed to the works of Marx, Lenin and other communists.
In 1919 he compiled a petition to the Versailles peace conference and lobbied
US president Woodrow Wilson, in an attempt to have the rights of Vietnamese
people recognised; both requests were ignored. In 1920 Ho became a foundation
member of the French Communist Party; shortly after he was sent to Moscow to
study Marxist-Leninism and became an Asian agent for Comintern (the Soviet-led
Communist International). In 1924 Ho traveled to China, where he worked with
the fledgling Chinese Communist Party (CCP), lecturing on revolutionary tactics
at the Whampoa Military Academy.
Towards Vietnamese independence
During Nguyen Sinh Cung’s three
years in China he married Zeng Xueming, a local woman 15 years his junior. When
the Chinese nationalist government started persecuting communists in 1927,
Nguyen Sinh Cung was forced to flee. He spent the next decade wandering,
visiting countries as far afield as Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Italy,
China, Hong Kong and Thailand. In 1940 Nguyen Sinh Cung began using the name Ho
Chi Minh, meaning ‘he who enlightens’. The following year he returned to
Vietnam to take charge of the Viet Minh in its struggle against the Japanese
invaders and Vichy French collaborators. During this time Ho received support
from the United States Office of Strategic Services (or OSS, the forerunner to
the CIA). The defeat of the Japanese in August 1945 created a power vacuum in
Vietnam, so Ho quickly attempted to create an independent state, free from
foreign control. At the beginning of September he presented a Vietnamese
declaration of independence, drawing heavily on similar documents from America
and France:
All men are created equal; they are
endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable Rights… among these are Life,
Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. This immortal statement was made in the
Declaration of Independence of the United States of America in 1776. In a
broader sense, this means: All the peoples on the earth are equal from birth,
all the peoples have a right to live, to be happy and free. The Declaration of
the Rights of Man and Citizen of the French Revolution made in 1791 also
states: All men are born free and with equal rights, and must always remain
free and have equal rights. Those are undeniable truths … From the autumn of
1940, our country ceased to be a French colony and became a Japanese
possession. After the Japanese had surrendered to the Allies, our whole people
rose to regain our national sovereignty, and to found the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam. The truth is that we have wrested our independence from the
Japanese and not from the French. The French have fled, the Japanese have
capitulated, Emperor Bao Dai has abdicated. Our people have broken the chains
which for nearly a century have fettered them and have won independence for the
Fatherland.
Ho Chi Minh sought international
recognition for the newly independent Vietnam, but these overtures were ignored
by all major leaders, including US president Harry Truman. Meanwhile, continued
violence and unrest in Vietnam gave the French a pretext to move large numbers
of troops back into its former colony. This triggered the First Indochina War,
with Ho leading the Viet Minh against the French, refusing several offers of a
negotiated peace. After Vietnam was divided at the Geneva conference in 1954,
Ho and the Viet Minh established themselves in the north. There he mimicked the
early policies of Chinese leader Mao Zedong, by redistributing land to peasants
and encouraging the interrogation, torture and execution of former landlords.
When it became apparent that South Vietnam would not participate in elections
for the reunification of Vietnam, Ho and his ministers began planning to
overthrow the South. This strategy led to American military intervention and
the unfolding of the Vietnam War (1964-75).
‘Uncle Ho’
Ho is not, and never
was, a revolutionary who fitted any Western stereotype. He seized upon Lenin as
a practical means of fighting colonialism – but his communist
“internationalism” was always qualified by Vietnamese nationalism. He never
committed himself 100 per cent to Moscow or to Peking. An American who knew Ho
in the 1940s adds: ‘He was totally intractable… He had only one dream, and that
was the freedom of Vietnam.
Time magazine, 1968
Time magazine, 1968
In 1959 Ho Chi Minh resigned as the
Lao Dong’s general secretary, though he remained a member of the party’s
Politburo. The image of Ho Chi Minh as the authoritarian ruler of North Vietnam
was fostered by the West, not based on reality. American presidents like
Johnson and Nixon often addressed their tirades and peace proposals to “Old Ho”
– and Ho sometimes personally responded – but in reality his political
authority was limited. As the father of Vietnamese nationalism, his views were
heard and considered with esteemed reverence. As a Politburo member he
participated in discussion and debate. But political authority ultimately
rested with the Politburo, which made decisions collectively and democratically.
Ho backed the decisions of the Politburo, whether or not he personally agreed
with the
Perhaps Ho Chi Minh’s real value to North Vietnam was as a figurehead. His own lifestyle was modest and frugal. Even into his 70s Ho walked several kilometres each day; he dressed casually, ate little and had few significant personal possessions. He spoke calmly and thoughtfully, rarely losing his temper. He enjoyed meeting and speaking with others, particularly children. As one historian noted, some of the same qualities of Gandhi and Nelson Mandela could be found in Ho Chi Minh. He was a deep thinker but was flexible, always willing to adapt and compromise. He understood his enemies better than they understood him.
Ho’s value has a figurehead was ruthlessly exploited by his comrades. Shortly before Ho died in September 1969, aged 79, he requested his ashes be gathered up and scattered without fanfare. The Vietnamese people, Ho said, “do not have the time or money” for anything else. But against his wishes, Ho’s body was embalmed and put on public display in a mausoleum in Hanoi. It remains there today, still open to public view. Party strategists confected a personality cult, not unlike those created for Lenin, Stalin and Mao Zedong. The dead Ho Chi Minh was portrayed as ‘Uncle Ho’, the Strategist, the Theoretician, the Thinker, the Statesman, the Man of Culture, the Diplomat, the Poet, the Philosopher.
The unknown Ho
Some historians have suggested that Ho Chi Minh contributed to, and perhaps even manufactured this personality cult. Evidence on this is scant. What is certainly true is that little is known about many aspects of Ho’s life, and that a good deal of information has been concealed or manipulated. The image of Ho as ‘father of his people’ may be one that Ho himself encouraged, as suggested in this 1999 article from TIME Asia magazine:
What is the truth? It is difficult to know because Ho’s life is shrouded in shadows and ambiguities. Even the date of his birth has been obscured by the authorities, who believe this uncertainty will somehow add to his mystique. The official date is May 19, 1890, but archives in Paris and Moscow show six different dates from 1890 to 1904 … Ho himself aided in the creation of his myth. A booklet written in 1948 under the name of Tran Dan Tien describes President Ho as a modest man of the people who was nonetheless the father of the nation and a hero greater than Le Loi and other luminaries of Vietnamese history. When in 1990 I pointed out that Tran Dan Tien was a pseudonym used by Ho and thus Ho was praising himself, I was called a traitor and berated for attempting to tarnish the image of Uncle Ho.
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