namvets.com  Welcome home Bothers and Sisters!

 

Looking for Homecoming stories of Vietnam vets

HI,
My name is Tonja Cox, and another veteran gave me this link to use to
contact more veterans who might wish to tell their stories for
publication. I just completed my Master's Thesis, concerning homecoming
stories of Vietnam veterans, and it was well received, both
professionally and by veterans who participated. I have been advised by
several professors to continue the work and submit it for publication.
To get these stories out there for the public to see and hopefully come
to understand what Vietnam veterans experienced then and still
experience today, I need more stories to make it book length. Anyone
wishing to participate should email me at tweety@webound.com. To give
you a little info about me, I was a former employee of the VA back in
1978 and I saw firsthand the discrimination against Vietnam veterans
seeking assistance from the VA. I was working there when a veteran
applied 6 times for hospitalization for what is now called PTSD. He said
he was having flashbacks, and was terribly afraid he would hurt someone.
He was the janitor of our local grade school and didn't want to hurt the
children, or anyone else. Every month, he was denied. In fact, my
supervisor never submitted the paperwork I so meticulously filled out in
triplicate. He stamped it denied and filed it. I was infuriated then.
But a few days after his sixth denial, he went home, and during one of
his "flashbacks," he took the shotgun down from the gun rack, got down
behind the sofa, and when his wife came through the door carrying
decorations for their daughter's wedding reception the next week, he
blew her head off, fighting the enemy in his mind. He told the police he
never saw her. When I heard, I quit the VA that day and never went back.
I swore I would do something to let people know about the kind of
treatment these men were receiving from those who should have
understood. My boss often made me give up my comfortable chair for the
WWII Vets who came in to chew the fat. But let a Vietnam vet walk in and
he was lucky to be in the office long enough to use the metal folding
chair in front of the desk. I just couldn't accept it. Back in 1988, I
had the opportunity to publish a few articles for a Veteran's Day issue
of a newspaper. I spoke with several veterans then, and the articles
were well received, especially by the veterans who seemed relieved to
have a chance to talk about what had happened to them. I got the same
reception when I started working on my Master's thesis. The support has
been overwhelming. I would be happy to send a copy of the work to anyone
interested in participating. I want to know about your homecoming
experiences. How you were treated when you came home, by the public,
your family, your friends, the government, etc. And how you feel today
in the face of the Iraq War. I look forward to hearing from more of you.
I can give you contact info for some of the others who have
participated, if you would like a reference. Please help me get this
information out there to a public who may be more willing to understand
now than they were back then.
 
Tonja Cox
HCR 1, Box 870
Pontiac, MO 65729
417-679-3006
 

This site is dedicated to the more than 58,000 Soldiers who fought and died serving their Country in Vietnam.
All rights reserved Copyright© 1998-2007 namvets.com  Vietnam Veterans Inc., P.O. Box 684,  LaPorte, IN 46352
Site last updated 03/26/07