Today marks the 50th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon, Vietnam.Â
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The anniversary is a good time to reflect on the journey of refugees, like the Vietnamese, becoming new Americans, Dennis Romboy writes.Â
One such woman is Naja Pham Lockwood. She escaped with her family on the last South Vietnamese ship to leave Vietnam as Saigon fell to the North Vietnamese.Â
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âIt just really shows that refugees and immigrants are part of the fabric of what makes America. It is the fabric of America. Refugees do make America great,â Lockwood said. âI donât identify as a Vietnamese. I am an American with Vietnamese roots. I feel as though this is my home. I donât think of Vietnam as my home.â
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Lockwood now lives in Park City and is the director of "On Healing Lands, Birds Chirp," a short documentary exploring the lasting trauma of the Vietnam War.Â
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The documentary features interviews with the people connected to the iconic photo "Saigon Execution."Â
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On Feb. 1, 1968, Associated Press photographer Eddie Adams captured the national police chief of South Vietnam, Brig. Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, shooting Nguyen Van Lem, a Vietcong officer, in the head point-blank, two days after the Tet Offensive. Lem was believed to have murdered the wife and six children of one of Loanâs deputies, Romboy reported.Â
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âThat photo was always in my mind all throughout my life. I thought about the victims involved. I thought about the story behind Eddie Adamsâ photo,â Lockwood said. âThat photo haunted me as a child and I wanted to just make peace with that photo by telling the story.â
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