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Send a text (https://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/tex...) hmTv | The Fog of War and Humanity Ep. 471 Rich Acritelli with guest Mai Pham (Part 2) In Part 2 of this compelling conversation, host Rich Acritelli continues his interview with author Kwan Mai Pham, exploring the complex family history and emotional aftermath behind her memoir, A Bridge from Saigon. Mai reveals that her relatives were split across both sides of Vietnam’s conflict, with deep roots in the North as well as the South. She shares stunning details about family members who held positions within the Communist Party, alongside relatives on her father’s side who were persecuted as the revolution consolidated power. Mai recounts how two of her grandfathers died under communist rule: one during an internal party purge in the late 1940s, and another who was imprisoned and ultimately died in jail after land confiscations and political retaliation swept through the North. She explains the sacred role teachers hold in Vietnamese culture, and how that reverence shaped even the way her grandfather was targeted. The episode also explores the devastating reality of re-education camps after 1975. Mai describes an uncle who spent ten years in a camp, emerging deeply changed, and later being brought to the United States through the family reunification program. Rich and Mai discuss Vietnam’s gradual shift toward normalization with the U.S., the country’s rapid adaptation, and the dramatic transformation Mai witnessed on later visits, including the “newness” of modern banking and international travel in the late 1990s. Mai also speaks candidly about identity and language: how overseas Vietnamese are viewed differently depending on who you encounter, how accents and vocabulary reveal your origins, and what it feels like to return to a homeland that has moved on, especially in a nation where most citizens are too young to remember Saigon or the war. Finally, the conversation turns inward, focusing on the immigrant experience in America. Mai shares that her greatest challenge as a child refugee was loneliness, and that because she learned English quickly and without an accent, adults assumed she needed no support. She reflects on her parents’ extraordinary strength and sacrifice, her brothers’ drive and resilience, and the slow, painful journey toward finding closure, including a return trip to Vietnam that brought both healing and resurfaced trauma for her father. Part 2 deepens the emotional and historical context of Mai’s story, setting the stage for Part 3, where the discussion will move into her education, professional path, and the long-term work of coping, resilience, and meaning-making. Support the show (https://www.buzzsprout.com/2449781/su...)