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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/481231910

All points of the compass

Tran Van Lam had the ill-fated destiny to be foreign minister of South Vietnam during the devastating war with the North. He was a patriot, committed to seeing his country emerge from its colonial history. He was also the father of nine children, who with his wife formed a seemingly privileged family, which dined together, had vacations at the beach, learned musical instruments, and were instilled with their Vietnamese identity. As the war intensified, he and his wife made provisions for the children to leave the country. The nine children were dispersed to Australia, France, the U.S. and Scotland. The hope was that they would be educated abroad and bring their talents back to their native country. That was not to be. Tran VanLam was betrayed by the United States, his ally against the North. While he was a delegate to the Paris peace talks, Henry Kissinger secretly arranged the pull out with the North. Fortunate to be airlifted out at the fall of Saigon, he and his wife finally emigrated to Australia with one small bag, where they ultimately opened a coffee shop. The adult children, now in mid -career with families of their own, speak poignantly about their experience of dislocation. They each longed to be re-united as a family and had to struggle to forge a new identity in a foreign land. They were all deeply affected by their father s expectations to become accomplished and"give back." Each one feels "multicultural." All Points of the Compass is at once a gripping portrait of the "immigrant experience" and a new perspective on the American role in the Vietnam War.

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http://schema.org/description

  • "Nine children of Trà̂n Văn Lá̆m, former foreign minister of South Vietnam, talked about their experience of dislocation, of their lives in new countries: America, the U.K., Canada, France, and Australia."
  • "Tran Van Lam had the ill-fated destiny to be foreign minister of South Vietnam during the devastating war with the North. He was a patriot, committed to seeing his country emerge from its colonial history. He was also the father of nine children, who with his wife formed a seemingly privileged family, which dined together, had vacations at the beach, learned musical instruments, and were instilled with their Vietnamese identity. As the war intensified, he and his wife made provisions for the children to leave the country. The nine children were dispersed to Australia, France, the U.S. and Scotland. The hope was that they would be educated abroad and bring their talents back to their native country. That was not to be. Tran VanLam was betrayed by the United States, his ally against the North. While he was a delegate to the Paris peace talks, Henry Kissinger secretly arranged the pull out with the North. Fortunate to be airlifted out at the fall of Saigon, he and his wife finally emigrated to Australia with one small bag, where they ultimately opened a coffee shop. The adult children, now in mid -career with families of their own, speak poignantly about their experience of dislocation. They each longed to be re-united as a family and had to struggle to forge a new identity in a foreign land. They were all deeply affected by their father s expectations to become accomplished and"give back." Each one feels "multicultural." All Points of the Compass is at once a gripping portrait of the "immigrant experience" and a new perspective on the American role in the Vietnam War."@en
  • "This is the story of one Vietnamese family. For Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, his love of democracy would turn into a poisonous cocktail that would shatter his family's life. Thirty years later this is the story of his nine children, flung to all points of the compass. This contemporary story is about the cost of conflict, the reality of exile and the loss of homeland, culture and closeness of family. It is told through the eyes of the children in their culturally diverse locations, using extraordinary standard 8 footage shot by Tran Van Lam in 1950s to 1970s Vietnam."@en
  • ""This is the story of one Vietnamese family. For Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, his love of democracy would turn into a poisonous cocktail that would shatter his family's life. Thirty years later this is the story of his nine children, flung to all points of the compass. This contemporary story is about the cost of conflict, the reality of exile and the loss of homeland, culture and closeness of family. It is told through the eyes of the children in their culturally diverse locations, using extraordinary standard 8 footage shot by Tran Van Lam in 1950s to 1970s Vietnam" from copied record."@en
  • "The story of the family of Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. Thirty years later his nine children are flung to all points of the compass."@en
  • "All Points of the Compass is a testament to the enduring bonds of family. Against a backdrop of uncertainty and political instability, Tran Van Lam, South Vietnam's Foreign Minister during the Vietnam War, fathered nine remarkable children who have set out to all points of the globe."
  • "This is the story of one Vietnamese family. For Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, his love of democracy would turn into a poisonous cocktail that would shatter his family's life. Thirty years later this is the story of his nine children, flung to all points of the compass. This contemporary story is about the cost of conflict, the reality of exile and the loss of homeland, culture and closeness of family. It is told through the eyes of the children in their culturally diverse locations, using extraordinary standard 8 footage shot by Tran Van Lam in 1950s to 70s Vietnam."@en
  • "This is the story of one Vietnamese family. For Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, his love of democracy would turn into a poisonous cocktail that would shatter his family's life. Thirty years later this is the story of his nine children, flung to all points of the compass. This contemporary story is about the cost of conflict, the reality of exile and the loss of homeland, culture and closeness of family. It is told through the eyes of the children in their culturally diverse locations, using extraordinary standard 8 footage shot by Tran Van Lam in 1950s to 70s Vietnam."
  • "Summary: "This is the story of one Vietnamese family. For Charles Tran Van Lam, Foreign Minister in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War, his love of democracy would turn into a poisonous cocktail that would shatter his family's life. Thirty years later this is the story of his nine children, flung to all points of the compass."--Container."@en
  • "Nine children of Trần Văn Lắm, former foreign minister of South Vietnam, talked about their experience of dislocation, of their lives in new countries: America, the U.K., Canada, France, and Australia."

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Documentary"@en
  • "Personal narratives"
  • "Personal narratives"@en
  • "History"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "All points of the compass"
  • "All points of the compass"@en
  • "All points of the compass a Vietnamese diaspora"