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My Ho Chi Minh's
Sting
Member Posts: 629 ✭✭✭✭
It took a while, maybe two or three years, for me to wear out the Ho Chi Minh sandals that I brought home from the war. Ubiquitous in Vietnam and named for their infamous leader; popular among returning veterans for a while, they eventually went out of style.
Made from the cut up tread of tires, and with straps fashioned from the ruddy colored inner tubes that were used over there, the attention-getting sandals brought smiles and questions from relatives and friends everywhere and proved that there was more than war; to discuss about that country that we went to fight in.
The straps were the first things to break on the shoes, and although any Vietnamese could build these footwear all day long without thinking, my repairs never lasted. But I know more now and promise myself every year that, this, is the year that I'll make some more. We'll see.
Made from the cut up tread of tires, and with straps fashioned from the ruddy colored inner tubes that were used over there, the attention-getting sandals brought smiles and questions from relatives and friends everywhere and proved that there was more than war; to discuss about that country that we went to fight in.
The straps were the first things to break on the shoes, and although any Vietnamese could build these footwear all day long without thinking, my repairs never lasted. But I know more now and promise myself every year that, this, is the year that I'll make some more. We'll see.
Comments
Regards from a Caribou (Army) driver from the Delta,
Tim
quote:Beware the gauntlet in the dust of a faltering, but re-awakened Republic... Enraged Americans, with deep tenacious convictions, Patriots all, shall pick it up and restore this Nation's Constitutional balance, and if necessary, with armed, violent and deadly resolve." G. Louis Turner, Jr.
It took a while, maybe two or three years, for me to wear out the Ho Chi Minh sandals that I brought home from the war. Ubiquitous in Vietnam and named for their infamous leader; popular among returning veterans for a while, they eventually went out of style.
Made from the cut up tread of tires, and with straps fashioned from the ruddy colored inner tubes that were used over there, the attention-getting sandals brought smiles and questions from relatives and friends everywhere and proved that there was more than war; to discuss about that country that we went to fight in.
The straps were the first things to break on the shoes, and although any Vietnamese could build these footwear all day long without thinking, my repairs never lasted. But I know more now and promise myself every year that, this, is the year that I'll make some more. We'll see.
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