Ho Chi Minh
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Personal life
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Date and place of birth
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19 May 1890, Nghe An Province, French Indochina
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Parents
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Nguyen Sinh Sac (father)
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Claimed religion
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Unknown[1]
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Education
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Educated in France
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Spouse
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Tang Tuyet Minh
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Children
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None
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Date & Place of Death
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3 September 1969 (aged 79), in Hanoi
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Manner of Death
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Heart failure
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Place of burial
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Buried in Hanoi with honors
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Dictatorial career
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Country
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Vietnam
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Military service
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Led military as commander in chief during wars with France and US
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Highest rank attained
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N/A
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Political beliefs
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Communist
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Political party
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Vietnam Workers Party
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Date of dictatorship
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Served as President from 2 September 1945 – 3 September 1969
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Wars started
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Invasions of South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia; Vietnam War
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Number of deaths attributed
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100,000+
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Ho Chi Minh, born on May 19, 1890 as Nguyen Tat Thanh, was a Vietnamese revolutionary and communist dictator who imposed socialist authoritarian rule on North Vietnam, dashing any hopes of it becoming a democratic country. He was prime minister of the Viet Minh, a Communist proto-state, from 1945 to 1955. The Viet Minh became the government of North Vietnam in 1954. Ho became president in 1955 and held this position until death on September 2, 1969. Ho was more a figurehead than a leader. Although Le Duan, the party boss, maintained a lower profile, he was a more powerful leader. "Ho" is a surname while "Chi Minh" means "the one who brings light." Vietnamese generally call him Bác Hồ (Uncle Ho). This phrase was coined in imitation of "Uncle Joe," one of Stalin's nicknames. Official propaganda stresses that Ho was celibate and dedicated only to welfare of the nation. Few Vietnamese are aware that he was married to Tang Tuyet Minh, a Chinese Catholic who lived in Guangzhou. After the Vietnam War ended in 1975, Saigon was renamed Ho Chi Minh City.
Life and career[edit]
Nguyen Tat Thanh left Vietnam at the age of 20. He traveled to London, New York and Paris and took different jobs (among others: worked as a ship steward, gardener, cook in a restaurant). While working on a ship he used name Nguyen Van Ba, then he returned to his original name.
In 1919 he joined the French Socialist Party and in 1920, after the party fell apart, he become a member of the French Communist Party. He became an expert in colonialism issues. In 1922 he was delegated to Moscow, where he studied the doctrine and techniques of Communism.
In 1925 he was sent to China, officially as a staff member of the Soviet Consulate in Canton, in fact as a Comintern agent. Then he became the Director of the Comintern Office in Shanghai. Since then, until the start of the Second World War he traveled a lot over Asia.
- Ho throughout his life was a dedicated Communist internationalist. In 1938 Ho went from Moscow to Moa's side at Yenan.[2][3]
- Ho Chi Minh was a nationalist in the sense that he had a special affection for Vietnam's people and favored Vietnamese unification and independence, but, from his reading of Lenin’s Theses onward, he firmly adhered to the Leninist principle that Communist nations should subordinate their interests to those of the international Communist movement.[4]
- Because of Ho Chi Minh drafting a Declaration of Independence that specifically referenced the American revolution, liberals (including most infamously Barack Obama) thought Ho Chi Minh was inspired by Thomas Jefferson, even though many stuff in Minh's declaration had stark differences from Jefferson's ideas (namely, placing more emphasis on the nation than on individual men), as well as faking admiration specifically to trick Americans into supporting his cause,[5] falling in line with the Communist use of deceit to fool the public into believing the opposite of the Communists' true intentions.
External links[edit]
Ho Chi Minh
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Vietnamese name
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Vietnamese
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Hồ Chí Minh
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- Triumph Foresaken - history book by Mike Moyar which disproves most of the liberal propaganda about Ho.
- Viet Quoc- The website of the Vietnamese Nationalist Party.
- The Blood-Red Hands of Ho Chi Minh, Vietcong mass murder in South Vietnam
- Statistics Of Vietnamese Democide: Estimates, Calculations, And Sources
- The North Vietnamese Terror "More than 172,000 people died during the North Vietnam land reform campaign after being classified as landowners and wealthy farmers, official records of the time show. But official figures leave out summary executions of those accused of membership of the National People’s Party, however. Unofficial estimates of those killed by Ho Chi Minh’s Vietnam Labor Party, which later become the Vietnamese Communist Party, range from 200,000 to 900,000. ...“The land reform campaign was a crime of genocide like that of Pol Pot,” Hao said."
- "The Massacre of Hue", Time Magazine, 1969 South Vietnamese skulls stacked on top of one another in dozens of mass graves reveal a gruesome slaughter of thousands by the Vietcong.
- "The Human Cost of Communism in Vietnam," US Government Report estimates that at least half a million were killed in the north and that up to one million will be killed in the south following the Communist victory. See the rest here,here, and here. Communist Lt. Col. Chuyen states that 5 million South Vietnamese are targets for persecution and that about 500,000 will be killed--which is almost exactly what happened. When asked if fears of a bloodbath are exaggerated, he says "they could not be exaggerated. It will happen." It did happen.
- Ho Chi Minh’s Land Reform: Mistake or Crime? Lam Thanh Liem, a major authority on land issues in Vietnam, concludes that the communists perpetrated a huge bloodbath and that the death toll was in the hundreds of thousands.
- The Vietnamese Gulag Chilling reports of the utter despair and mass suicides that followed Communist victory in South Vietnam.
- In Vietnam's Gulag, the Captives Die a Slow Death
- "Hanoi Regime Resolved to Oust Nearly All Ethnic Chinese"
- Nightmare at Sea Haunts Refugee Who Survived Communist ethnic cleansing and forced expulsions literally drove millions into the sea, where hundreds of thousands died.
- Camp Survivors At least a million South Vietnamese were sent to concentration camps, with at least 165,000 never being seen again.
- Genocide in Laos The Vietnamese and Laotian Communists waged a genocidal war against the Hmong tribesmen, with 100–300,000 dead.
- Ho Chi Minh The Man and The Myth Documentation on YouTube
References[edit]
- ↑ Available sources attribute either traditional Vietnamese folk religion or atheism to Ho Chi Minh
- ↑ OSS in China: prelude to Cold War, By Maochun Yu.
- ↑ http://www.oldwardogs.us/2006/12/understanding_r.html
- ↑ http://www.triumphforsaken.com/index.php?pr=Excerpt
- ↑ https://www.wnd.com/2013/07/obama-ho-chi-minh-comment-echoes-kgb-disinformation/