Truong nhu tang biography for kids
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A Viet Cong Memoir
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Trương Như Tảng
Vietnamese lawyer and politician (1923–2005)
Trương Như Tảng (14 November 1923 – 8 November 2005) was a South Vietnamese lawyer and politician. He was active in many anti-South Vietnam organizations before joining the newly created Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam as the Minister of Justice. He spent many years in the jungles near and in Cambodia until the Fall of Saigon in 1975. He quickly became disillusioned with the new government and escaped the reunited Socialist Republic of Vietnam via a boat in August 1978. He was sent to a refugee camp in Indonesia before moving to Paris, France, to live out his life in exile.
Early life
[edit]Tảng grew up in Saigon as one of six sons of a rich father who owned a rubber plantation and a printing house and taught ("for pleasure") at the Collège Chasseloup-Laubat; since his father intended him to be a pharmacist, after studying (exclusively in French) at the Collège Chasseloup-Laubat, Tảng was sent to Hanoi University for a year and then (after a delay caused by the violence attendant on the end of World War II in Vietnam) to France in 1946 to study pharmacy.[3] While in Paris, however, Tảng was introduced to the movement for Vietnamese independence, met Hồ Chí Mi
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A Vietcong Memoir by Truong Tang Essay
1. Introduction
In 1985, Yale University Professor Truong Nhu Tang published a historical memoir: A Vietcong Memoir: An Inside Account of the Vietnam War and Its Aftermath. This brutally honest account of the Vietnam War and the politics and corruption within finally presented the United States' enemies as very human and honorable in many actions, goals, and sacrifices. Since its publication, Professor Tang was imprisoned in Vietnam and released into a Vietnamese afterlife in exile. As a decorated scholar, Truong Tang held an intensive news conference and book signing for Professor Truong Tang. This paper explores Professor Tang's major lessons and the interview perspectives of other scholars upon this book. Finally, this paper responds to Professor Tang's successful accomplishment of his major goals for A Vietcong Memoir. Upon completion of the book, Truong Tang had five very important and personal objectives for releasing his memoirs. The first goal sought to discuss "the political infighting among Communists before and after the Vietnam War". This sharing of Vietnam's "dirty laundry" was essential since "In the closed society of Vietnam, party policy is law and loyalty is a matter of life and death. All other elements of human discou