'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (2024)

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (1)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (2)BBC

Andy Yearley and Barton Williams grew up at opposite ends of the world - but when they met, they discovered a shared past.

Both were "rescued" from Saigon orphanages after the US withdrew its troops from Vietnam in the early 1970s.

Thousands of children were rehomed in the United States but Barton grew up in south Australia and Andy ended up on the Scottish island of Lewis.

The pair met by chance in 2021 while Barton was starring in a surfing film set on the island.

They had both grown up as Asian children in a predominantly white communities, with no memory or knowledge of Vietnam.

"It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan," Andy says.

“It's like meeting a twin brother – a blood brother.

"We just clicked straight away."

The bond between the two men has been brought to life on stage at the Edinburgh Fringe in Precious Cargo - a theatre performance telling the stories of the Vietnamese orphans.

The show explores the individual experience of each person but also their shared feelings of displacement.

"Andy has lived almost a repeat life to mine but in Scotland," Barton says in his broad Australian accent.

"He has grown up in a very predominant white middle-class environment.

“He looks full Viet, but he doesn’t sound like a Viet - just like me."

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (3)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (4)Ralph Tonge

Andy was adopted by Eileen and Iain Yearley after he had been found in the Saigon orphanage by a friend of the family.

According to Andy, the only flight he could be put on was to Orly airport in France.

"My adoptive mum had to travel there - apparently there was no-one with me,” Andy says.

"I was left alone as a baby in the airport.”

He was brought up in the village of Keose, about 12 miles from Stornoway, the main town on Lewis.

He says he wore thick NHS glasses and had long black hair to protect his ears after they were damaged in Vietnam.

"I was one of the only Asian people in the Western Isles, certainly the only Vietnamese," he says.

His parents never mentioned Vietnam, he says.

"They were my parents and I was their child," Andy says.

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (5)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (6)

By early 1975, it was becoming clear that the war would end as South Vietnam strongholds fell to the communist forces of the Viet Cong.

Hundreds of thousands of refugees fled by air and sea, including westerners and Vietnamese people who had supported the Americans.

The US military had left the country two years prior but a feeling of concern and panic was building among the Western public for the orphaned children left behind.

Their cries were heard by President Gerald Ford, who ordered Operation Babylift, taking 2,000 South Vietnamese children from orphanages to the United States.

The final flight filled with children and orphanage staff took to the skies as artillery fire came barrelling towards the runway.

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (7)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (8)Getty Images

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (9)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (10)Getty Images

"The Vietnam War and Operation Babylift is not something that many people - including myself - know an awful lot about," Andy says.

"Part of bringing the play to the Fringe is to raise awareness of the historical event", Barton says.

"People always say sorry when they find out you are adopted, and I always replied 'Why? Don't be sorry'."

The show was originally performed in London as a full-length play of Barton's personal experience but in bringing the show to the Fringe the creative team decided to give it a more Scottish focus.

Despite a life working with music, the play was Andy’s first experience in the theatre industry. He wrote original compositions for the play, while Barton is the lead and sole actor.

Andy and Barton were introduced to each other by a friend who was working on Barton's surf film, Laura Cameron-Lewis, who became the play's director.

Her husband Andrew Eaton-Lewis, then joined the Precious Cargo project as a producer to develop the script and find other orphans.

"I didn’t want it to be narcissistic," Barton says.

"Now that it's moulded with other orphans, it isn’t just my story, it's more than that."

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (11)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (12)Ralph Tonge

There are unanswered questions for many children taken from Vietnam.

Andy and Barton travelled back at different points in their life to experience the culture of their birth country.

Andy travelled to Ho Chi Minh City, the official name for Saigon, for a BBC2 documentary in 2004 to explore Vietnam for the first time.

Andy, who works as a music teacher, played accordion for children at the orphanage where he had been found.

He says his only link to his past was locating the street he was found on.

Barton was unaware of any living blood relatives until he recently discovered a second cousin through an ancestry website.

His search was aided by another Viet war orphan, Toni Angelique Harrison, who is still searching for her own mother.

Toni, who was raised in Bedfordshire in England, has her voice and story feature in the show and hopes the publicity could reunite her with her mother.

She travelled to the US to meet her father in 2018, an American soldier who fell for her Vietnamese mother.

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (13)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (14)Toni Angelique Harrison

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (15)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (16)Toni Angelique Harrison

For all the children of Operation Babylift, time is not on their side, the play's producer says.

With the 50th anniversary fast approaching, the tragic reality is that their parents might not be here for much longer.

"Operation Babylift was seen as controversial at the time," Mr Eaton-Lewis says.

"Was it the right thing to do?

He says: "The Americans exorcising their guilt over Vietnam, it all seemed quiet colonialist – all these white families, adopting Vietnamese babies.

"But talking to the various adoptees, they are all very positive about their experience.

"They are aware it is a strange thing to grow up in these very white environments, and some of them did experience racism and it was very difficult.

"But we have very much based this show on what these people have told us – and they were very grateful."

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (17)'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (18)

Despite the successful flights, Operation Babylift began in tragedy as an operational failure caused the first plane to crash, killing 138 people, including 78 children.

In total, a huge humanitarian effort saw 3,300 Viet children - not all of them orphans - make it safely to western allies such as the USA, Canada, Australia, the UK and West Germany.

Many of the children were orphaned by war, but some had just been separated from their parents in the chaos.

But because of their coincidental meeting and work on the Fringe show, both men say it has brought their personal situation fresh in their mind.

Almost 50 years on, many are still searching for their biological families.

Precious Cargo is on Summerhall in Edinburgh until 26 August.

Thanks to Oli Charbonneau, lecturer of American History, at the University of Glasgow.

Related internet links

Theatre

Isle of Lewis

Vietnam

Scotland

Culture

Art

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

Adelaide

Vietnam War

Australia

'It’s not every day you meet another Vietnam orphan' (2024)

FAQs

What happens to orphans in Vietnam? ›

Poverty causes children to be forced to work; and those orphaned and abandoned are particularly vulnerable to human trafficking. They are trafficked within the country, or across the border into neighboring countries.

What is the quote about Vietnamese refugees? ›

"“When the crowded Vietnamese refugee boats met with storms or pirates, if everyone panicked all would be lost. But if even one person on the boat remained calm and centered, it was enough. It showed the way for everyone to survive.”"

Can I adopt a baby from Vietnam? ›

ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

Married heterosexual couples and single women age 25 – 55 with no more than 4 children already in the home may apply to adopt a child from Vietnam. Parent(s) must be at least 20 years older than the child(ren) to be adopted.

How many kids can you have in Vietnam? ›

A two-child policy is a government-imposed limit of two children allowed per family or the payment of government subsidies only to the first two children. A two-child policy has previously been used in several countries including Iran, Singapore, and Vietnam.

What is a famous quote for Vietnam? ›

You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours. But even at those odds, you will lose and I will win.” —Viet Minh leader Ho Chi Minh in a warning to French colonialists in 1946.

What are Vietnamese refugees called? ›

boat people, refugees fleeing by boat. The term originally referred to the thousands of Vietnamese who fled their country by sea following the collapse of the South Vietnamese government in 1975. Crowded into small vessels, they were prey to pirates, and many suffered dehydration, starvation, and death by drowning.

What is a famous quote from refugee? ›

Whether you were visible or invisible, it was all about how other people reacted to you. Good and bad things happened either way. If you were invisible, the bad people couldn't hurt you, that was true. But the good people couldn't help you, either.

Vietnam's orphans: Lives of hope and poverty ...Australian Broadcasting Corporationhttps://www.abc.net.au ›

Life in one of Vietnam's highland orphanages is often the beginning of a vicious cycle of poverty, freelance contributor Matthew Clayfield writes.
Although Vietnam has improved in many ways in recent years, we can't ignore the country's orphan crisis. It is estimated that there are approximately 2 ...
Vietnam Day 5 – Visiting a remote and very poor orphanage · This orphanage seemed particularly poor and they took in all kids even those kids with illnes...

What happens to orphans who don't get adopted? ›

Kids who are not adopted often get passed between many foster and group homes until they age out at age 18-21. Kids with disabilities, including learning disabilities, are twice as likely to age out of the system. Once they have aged out, many of these young vulnerable adults face life alone.

Are there still Amerasians trapped in Vietnam? ›

By 2018, at least 400 Amerasians still currently reside Vietnam through DNA testing of 500 people by the nonprofit organization Amerasians Without Borders.

Why did Vietnam stop adoptions? ›

In 2003, the U.S. suspended all adoptions from Vietnam over concerns about corruption, but a new agreement was reached between the two countries in 2006. Since that agreement took effect, more than 1,200 Vietnamese children were adopted by Americans.

What happened to the babies from the Vietnam War? ›

Over 2,500 children were relocated and adopted out to families in the United States and its allies. The operation was controversial because there was question about whether the evacuation was in the children's best interest, and because not all the children were orphans.

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