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RETURN TO ADOPTED VIETNAMESE INTERNATIONAL MAIN PAGES AVI. | ||
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Welcome to the special section for Australian Vietnamese Adoptees - proud Australians sharing a rich and diverse heritage. We would like to thank all the Australians, especially the Indigenous nations, for welcoming us into their worlds and lives. Adopted Vietnamese Australians National Register List Australian Contact Directory Other Support and Searching Information 2004 News & Events newsletter Vietnamese Australian "Idols"
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AVA acknowledges the Indigenous Traditional Land owners of Australia and aims to respect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders' cultural heritage, beliefs and continuing relationship with the land. | |
| Ms Jennifer Szetho - one of the
Melbourne representatives of AVI and an Operation Babylift child, 1975,
supplied the below testimonials in October 2009 by some key people in
her life following her arrival to Australia.
Judy and Bob Write: Bob first met
Jenny 34 years ago. Bob was a Chief Steward with Qantas and
in 1975 he flew into Bangkok where 77 babies and children boarded the
aircraft and they were taken to Melbourne as part of Operation
Baby Lift. Jenny was a 10 day old baby on board that aircraft. Elizabeth Thuan Writes: Jennifer came into our lives when she met our son Andrew at University. This led to yet another experience in our own Vietnamese Australian saga. We found that Jennifer had not received any introduction to the customs and rituals of the culture from which her ancestors came. We included her in family events and when the new grandchildren reached one year of age, we shared with her the ceremony which purports to show the child’s direction in life. For me, it was
just another aspect of a life which has only a few parallels in this
country. I became a sort of Vietnamese-by-extension in 1968 when I
married a fellow student. There were 72 Vietnamese nationals in
Australia at that time. After this, we
went through the fall of Saigon, attempting first to sponsor younger
brothers out of the tumultuous city and then enduring the long silence,
when we did not know what had happened to loved ones. The first
letters were very cautiously worded, but they confirmed that the family
still existed. Then we had word that one sister, pregnant and with a
three year old in tow, had “gone for a holiday”. After harrowing negotiations with Immigration, telegrams to the Prime Minister and a year of anguish, we welcomed them to Australia and my household suddenly got a taste of authentic Vietnamese home cooking. It was great fun, sharing the house and kids, but not a language. Good will, a sense of humour and prolific hand gestures go a long way! So this is how I came to find myself able to assist in Jennifer’s Vietnamese culture learning. I had a certain knowledge and point of view about the history, the politics, the war, the boat people, the food, the ceremonies, the deep appreciation of family and reverence for the ancestors. My version is an Aussie version, sometimes larrikin, sometimes critical, but basically with a deep respect for a way of life, a habit of thought and a resourcefulness of a people shattered and dispersed and gradually reunited and flourishing in a new homeland. Jen did me great honour by ‘adopting’ me as another mother, rather publicly, and without prior consultation. The culture learning continues, but these days Jen knows a lot about Vietnam and we are currently into rhyming slang and other profound mysteries of the Australian popular culture. Bewdy, cobber.
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