B U R E A U O F P U B L I C S E C R E T S |
[Bold numbers on the left refer to pages in the printed book]
viii. Some Web sources give the misleading
impression that there was a significant anarchist influence in early Vietnamese
struggles. Closer examination usually reveals that the supposed connection is
extremely flimsy. The pioneering anticolonial leader Phan Boi Chau, for example,
is sometimes referred to as a proponent of anarchism merely because his
thinking reflected certain distinctly anarchist themes, notably anti-imperialism
and direct action, and because he was on good terms with a few anarchists he
met in Japan and China — though he was on equally good terms with monarchists,
nationalists, socialists and militarists, and the organizations he founded
advocated nothing more radical than a constitutional monarchy or a democratic
republic. His overriding goal was to drive out the French; political groups and
ideologies interested him only insofar as they might contribute to that goal.
Until late in his life he scarcely manifested any interest even in socialism,
let alone anarchism. (For more on Phan Boi Chau, see Note 155.)
Nguyen An Ninh is a different matter. His eclectic and
romantic perspective did indeed reflect some anarchist influence (picked up from
his years in Paris). This anarchism was blended with a variety of other European
philosophical and cultural currents from Rousseau to Nietzsche, and since Ninh
was a very popular and charismatic figure, those themes undoubtedly had some
influence during the 1920s, particularly among the more educated urban youth.
Hue-Tam Ho Tai’s Radicalism and the Origins of the Vietnamese Revolution
gives a good account of the cultural ferment of that period, which served as a
prelude to the more directly social and political struggles of the 1930s.
The only explicit Vietnamese anarchist mentioned in the
present book is Trinh Hung Ngau. (Other sources describe him as a nationalist
with anarchist leanings.) According to Ngo Van, he participated in the Jeune
Annam movement (1926) and in the newspaper L’Annam (1926-1928) and was
one of the founders of La Lutte (1933); but he withdrew from the latter
after the third issue because he was unable to express his anarchist ideal
within it (Vietnam 1920-1945, p. 212). He later took part in the
Indochinese Congress movement (1936-1937).
[Ngo Van: Relayer of Living History]
xiv. Here is Baudelaire’s poem (1851), followed by a translation:
That is a fairly literal translation. For some more poetic attempts (none very satisfactory), see http://fleursdumal.org/poem/157.LA CLOCHE FÊLÉE
II est amer et doux, pendant les nuits d’hiver,
D’écouter, près du feu qui palpite et qui fume,
Les souvenirs lointains lentement s’élever
Au bruit des carillons qui chantent dans la brume.Bienheureuse la cloche au gosier vigoureux
Qui, malgré sa vieillesse, alerte et bien portante,
Jette fidèlement son cri religieux,
Ainsi qu’un vieux soldat qui veille sous la tente!Moi, mon âme est fêlée, et lorsqu’en ses ennuis
Elle veut de ses chants peupler l’air froid des nuits,
II arrive souvent que sa voix affaiblieSemble le râle épais d’un blessé qu’on oublie
Au bord d’un lac de sang, sous un grand tas de morts,
Et qui meurt, sans bouger, dans d’immenses efforts.It is bitter and sweet, during the winter nights,
THE CRACKED BELL
to listen, beside the quivering, smoking fire,
to distant memories slowly rising
at the sound of the bells chiming in the fog.Blessed is the strong-throated bell,
alert and healthy despite its old age,
which faithfully sends forth its pious tones,
like an old soldier keeping watch under his tent!But I — my soul is cracked, and when in its distress
it wants to fill the cold night air with its songs,
it often happens that its enfeebled voiceseems like the thick death-rattle of a wounded man, forgotten
beside a lake of blood, lying beneath a mass of corpses,
dying but unable to move despite immense efforts.
xvii. “Hundred Flowers movement (1956-1957): a campaign initiated by the Chinese Communist government, encouraging people to freely express their views on national policy questions. When millions of letters were received, most of them highly critical of the Maoist regime, the movement was brought to a prompt halt and the most critical authors were rounded up and interned in reeducation camps.
xix. Lines from Brassens’s song Les Funérailles d’antan (The Funerals of Long Ago), ca. 1956.
[Preface]
1. The quote is from Pascal’s Pensées #593 (note that the numbering is different in some editions).
2. Spanish Civil War (1936-1939): In July 1936 the fascistic general Francisco Franco (supported by Hitler and Mussolini) launched a military uprising against the recently elected Popular Front government. The latter, fearing genuine popular autonomy, had refused to arm the people, thereby enabling Franco’s forces to rapidly take over half of the country. Seeing no alternative, the anarchist-oriented workers and peasants bypassed the government, seized arms and themselves took up the fight against Franco — a process which rapidly overflowed into a widespread and very radical social revolution. The Spanish Communist Party did everything in its power to crush this revolution, in the name of unity in the struggle against Franco (who ultimately prevailed anyway, in part due to the demoralization resulting from the Stalinists’ vicious attacks on the popular revolution). The best general history is Burnett Bolloten’s The Spanish Civil War. See also Sam Dolgoff (ed.), The Anarchist Collectives: Workers’ Self-Management in the Spanish Revolution 1936-1939.4. Of the confiscated books, Paul Gentizon’s Mustapha Kémal ou l’Orient en marche (Mustafa Kemal, or The Orient on the Move) (1929) is about the Turkish nationalist leader Kemal Ataturk. Georges Garros’s Forceries humaines (Human Hothouses) (1926) is about early anticolonial struggles in Vietnam. Marx and Engels’s Communist Manifesto (1847) is a crucial historical document that has little connection with the Communist parties of the twentieth century. Leon Trotsky’s The Permanent Revolution (1929) expounded his view that the bourgeoisie in Russia, and in other even more underdeveloped countries, would be unable (or unwilling) to carry out a “bourgeois democratic revolution, and that therefore the proletariat would need to take the lead to accomplish such a goal; and that in so doing, it would push things beyond the bourgeois stage. Louis Roubaud’s Vietnam: la tragédie indochinoise (Vietnam: The Indochinese Tragedy) (1931) is a denunciation of colonial repression. John Reed’s Ten Days That Shook the World (1922) is a firsthand account of the Russian Revolution. The Marx biography is probably David Riazanov’s Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels: An Introduction to Their Lives and Works (1927). Sun Yat-sen (1866-1925) was a leader of the Chinese revolution of 1911 and the founder of the Guomindang (Chinese Nationalist Party). Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front (1928) is an antiwar novel about World War I. Silvio Pellico’s My Prisons (1833) is an account of ten years in Italian prisons.
5. Central Prison (Maison Centrale, literally Central House): the main Saigon prison.9. Lines from Victor Hugo’s poem Dicté après juillet 1830 (Dictated after July 1830), about the 1830 revolution.
10. Ngo Van was very big by Vietnamese standards (six feet tall), so average-size clothes would not fit him.11. Unless otherwise indicated, League always refers to the League of Internationalist Communists, the Trotskyist group founded by Lu Sanh Hanh, Ngo Van and Trinh Van Lau in 1935, destroyed in 1939, and revived in 1945. In contrast to the legal Trotskyists of the La Lutte group, who took part in elections and registered their publications, the LIC was an illegal group which focused on underground organizing and clandestine publications.
12. In May 1936 a Popular Front government (an alliance of Socialist, Communist, and other more or less center-left parties) was elected in France. Its inception was accompanied by a nationwide wave of strikes and factory occupations. 17. notables: wealthy, literate or respected local “worthies. Councils of notables were the administrative power in the peasant communities under the old imperial regime and continued under the French colonial regime to serve as the lowest rung of the administration, collecting taxes, rounding up conscripts, dispensing justice for minor crimes, etc.18. Poulo Condore (a.k.a. Con Son Island): an island lying off the coast of southern Vietnam. In 1861 the French colonial government built a penal colony there to hold political prisoners. In 1954 it was turned over to the South Vietnamese government, which continued to use it for the same purpose. It attained international notoriety in July 1970 when American congressional representatives, following a map drawn by a former inmate, broke away from the official guided tour and uncovered horrendous ill-treatment of prisoners. Photographs of some of the horrors (“tiger cages, torture-caused mutilations, etc.) appeared in Life magazine and contributed to the growing American opposition to the Vietnam War.
20. In traditional Vietnamese families the first child is referred to as number Two, to fool the evil spirits who would like to make off with the firstborn. Ngo Van’s narrative mentions Sister Two, Sister Five, Brother Seven (all from a previous marriage), Brother Ten, Brother Twelve and Brother Thirteen (Van himself, the youngest), so there were a total of twelve children in his family. The ones not mentioned had either died young or grown up and moved away (as had Sister Two and Sister Five). Brother Ten was tortured to death by the French in 1946.26. vu: short for vu et approuvé (seen and approved). The French word would seem cabalistic (mysterious) to the Vietnamese children.
27. capitation tax: a personal tax imposed on each adult individual, regardless of income. Though trivial for the rich or middle classes, it amounted to a significant portion of a poor person’s wages and a virtual impossibility for peasants living largely outside the money economy.30. Lady Hieu’s banyan tree, planted in memory of a generous rich lady who lived near Ngo Van’s village, provided shade for women returning from the market under the hot sun. See Ngo Van and Hélène Fleury’s Contes d’autrefois du Vietnam, pp. 80-81.
[Chapter 3: Years of Apprenticeship]
41. Constitutionalist Party: a very moderate
reformist tendency, begun in 1917 as a loose interest group of merchants,
landowners, bureaucrats and journalists and becoming an officially recognized
political party ca. 1923. It sought liberalization of certain laws and increased
status for a small elite of Vietnamese bourgeois and officials under French
rule, but opposed demands for national independence or significant social
reforms. Its main leader, Bui Quang Chieu, had a horror of mass democracy, to
say nothing of mass action. The notion of granting voting rights and access to
French citizenship to a somewhat larger segment of the population caused him to
“shudder at the thought of admitting undesirables into the great French family:
people without means of livelihood and without culture. . . . I cannot help
being seriously disturbed when I think that if, by some extraordinary measures,
mass naturalization was decreed in Cochinchina, the result of a legislative
election could depend on the vote of our cooks and rickshaw boys. The fact that
the colonists (for whom De La Chevrotière was one of the leading spokesmen)
could view such timid reformists as dangerously radical gives some measure of
how reactionary the French colonial system was.
Phan Chau Trinh: On Phan Chau Trinh and the other
early anticolonial leader, Phan Boi Chau, see Note 155.
44. Phan Van Truong’s Une histoire de conspirateurs annamites à Paris (1928) was reprinted with an Introduction by Ngo Van (L’Insomniaque, 2003). The quotation is from pp. 20-21 of that edition.
45. “Nguyen An Ninh Secret Society: The existence of this supposed secret society remains doubtful. Most of the evidence for it (stories of bizarre initiation rites, etc.) was concocted by the Sûreté and produced by torture, and even most of the peasants who were tortured denied any such affiliation. On the other hand, it is hard to imagine that Nguyen An Ninh’s wanderings through the countryside did not have some subversive aims. In 1926 he had made public statements to the effect that he was inclining toward a more spiritual path and had expressed interest in the recently formed Cao Dai sect. In early 1928 he shaved his head like a Buddhist monk and began traveling by bicycle from village to village selling a medicinal balm that he had concocted. Though he himself does not seem to have done any organizing, his comrades may have done so among the peasants who gathered around to meet him and listen to his talks; or other underground groups may have used his name as a rallying symbol to enhance their own appeal; or there may simply have been loose associations among people who shared a sympathy with him and his teachings. After refuting most of the evidence for the existence of such a secret society, Ngo Van noted that Ninh inspired the peasants with a quasi-mystical confidence; many of them felt ready to follow him without knowing exactly where or how. . . . He had succeeded in creating a virtual peasant movement, though one far removed from a disciplined and structured organization (Vietnam 1920-1945, p. 95). See also Hue-Tam Ho Tai’s Radicalism and the Origins of the Vietnamese Revolution, pp. 186-195.
46. 40% death rate: Although this may seem
improbably high, official sources confirm that very high death rates were
common. For example, the Phu Rieng plantation supervisors informed the French
Colonial Minister that 17 percent of their workers died in 1927, and this was
undoubtedly a conservative figure since the supervisors had an interest in
covering up as many of the deaths as possible. Reliable studies indicate that
many of the plantations had an average annual death rate of over 20
percent.
Yen Bai revolt (1930): This revolt was instigated by
the Viet Nam Quoc Dan Dang (National Party of Vietnam), a radical nationalist
organization founded in Hanoi in 1927 by the young teacher Nguyen Thai Hoc. By
the following year it had 1500 members organized into 120 clandestine cells. Its
violent audacity alarmed the colonial regime, but soon brought about its
downfall. The 1929 assassination of Bazin by a renegade VNQDD member led to
numerous arrests; the defeat of the Yen Bai revolt a year later led to the
group’s virtual annihilation. Nguyen Thai Hoc and twelve other leaders were
guillotined and hundreds of other members were captured and given heavy
sentences. The VNQDD never really recovered from this blow, though remnants of
the group escaped to southern China and returned to Vietnam fifteen years later
in the aftermath of World War II, fighting in the ranks of the Third Division
that appears in Chapter 7.
50. Indochinese Communist Party: This name was imposed by the Comintern in the hope of eventually including insurgent groups from Laos and Cambodia, but in reality the ICP was always almost exclusively Vietnamese.
52. “Moscow trainees (retours de Moscou, literally returnees from Moscow): radicals who had spent time in Moscow being trained as cadres for the Communist Party.55. restricted residence (interdiction de séjour): an order specifying that someone had to live in a particular place or was banned from particular places.
56. Saigon City Council: In order to create the appearance of democracy in Cochinchina, the French colonial regime established a few representative bodies such as municipal and colonial councils. These bodies had very limited powers, and in any case only a tiny percentage of property-owning natives were allowed to vote, so the allotted portion of indigenous representatives tended to be fairly conservative.60. invitation au voyage (invitation to travel): title of a Baudelaire poem (1854).
67. Line from Baudelaire’s poem Moesta et errabunda (Sad and Restless) (1855).
[Chapter 4: In the Central Prison]
79. Auprès de ma blonde: popular French song
dating from the seventeenth century.
Le Temps du mépris (Days of Contempt): 1935 novel
about a Communist militant imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp.
86. Lenin’s Testament: letter written during Lenin’s last illness in December 1922 to the Russian Communist Party, stating his views on how the regime should proceed following his death. The letter featured a sharp attack on Stalin’s brutality and deceitfulness and urged his removal from the position of General Secretary of the Party. It also criticized Trotsky’s bureaucratic tendencies. The Testament was suppressed by the Stalinists and officially acknowledged only in 1956 by Khrushchev.
[Chapter 5: From One Prison to Another]
101. Quotation from Victor Hugo’s play Ruy Blas (1838).
[Chapter 6: In the Mekong Delta]
116. The Indochina colonial administration was pro-Vichy,
so the Japanese occupation forces had felt comfortable leaving it in place.
After the defeat of the Vichy regime in France (August 1944), the colonial
administration’s loyalty to Japan became much more doubtful, particularly in the
event of an Allied invasion. The Japanese thus felt obliged to take over the
direct administration of Indochina and to preempt a potential French rebellion.
Bao Dai: the last emperor of Vietnam. During the
Japanese occupation he ruled as a Japanese puppet. In 1945 he went into exile,
then returned in 1949 to rule as a French puppet during the Indochina War. In
1955 he was ousted by his prime minister, Ngo Dinh Diem, and emigrated to
France.
[Chapter 7: Caught in a Crossfire]
124. “Third Division: an independent nationalist anticolonialist army including surviving members of the VNQDD and led by Nguyen Hoa Hiep. The Division sometimes had as many as 15,000 men and successfully fought both the French and the Vietminh from late 1945 to early 1946. It was eventually forced to disband and disperse into the population, in part because the Vietminh had begun providing the French with information on its locations and movements.
127. Gurkhas: Nepalese soldiers serving in the British colonial army.
138. “Ta Thu Thau’s group: It is unclear what
group this refers to.
Tran Van Thach’s final note: This photocopy was sent
to Ngo Van by Tran Van Thach’s son. It reads: Brother Two: I leave my children
in your hands. Please take care of them. 22-10-45.
[Chapter 8: Toward Other Shores]
148. World Without Visa (1947): novel about an international group of exiles stuck in Vichy France during World War II. The author, Jean Malaquais, later took part in the Council Communist Group mentioned on p. 203.
153. “October group: So called from its 1931-1932 journal Thang Muoi (October). Although this is the only use of this term in the present book, in other accounts (particularly Trotskyist ones concerned with retrospectively distinguishing the correct or incorrect lines of different groups) the October group or the October tendency is often used in a loose general way to refer to the ongoing tendency around Ho Huu Tuong, which is contrasted with the La Lutte group. In this broad sense, the October tendency is seen as including the League of Internationalist Communists for the Construction of the Fourth International (1935-1939), the Bolshevik-Leninists for the Construction of the Fourth International (1936), the journal Le Militant (1936-1937), the revived journal Thang Muoi (1938-1939), the bulletin Thay Tho (1938), the Saigon paper Tia Sang (1939), and the revived League of Internationalist Communists (1945-1946). These groups and publications criticized the La Lutte group for its accommodations with the Stalinists and tended to put more stress on underground grassroots agitation; but the two tendencies also overlapped and collaborated in many regards. This is probably why Ngo Van, though pointing out particular tactical differences in particular circumstances, did not use the October group label, so as not to present the history as a simplistic stuggle between two distinct rival currents.
155. Phan Boi Chau (1867-1940): pioneering
anticolonial leader. In 1904 he founded the Vietnam Modernization Society, whose
goal was to drive the French from Indochina and establish a constitutional
monarchy under the rebel prince Cuong De. The following year he and Cuong De
slipped out of the country and went to Japan, which was at that time seen as a
possible model for East Asian independence (it had achieved an impressive
modernization during the Meiji Era and had just won the Russo-Japanese war of
1904-1905). The Japanese authorities did not offer any direct aid for Phan Boi
Chau’s military schemes, but tentatively allowed him to organize an Eastern
Study Movement, which brought more than two hundred Vietnamese students to
Japan to learn about modern developments there and elsewhere in the outside
world, to meet insurgents from China and other Asian countries, and to be able
to discuss anticolonial strategies without censorship or fear of arrest. Under
French diplomatic pressure they were all expelled from Japan in 1909. Phan Boi
Chau relocated to Siam and then to China. The 1911 Chinese revolution influenced
him to go beyond monarchism and in 1912 he formed the Vietnam Restoration
Society, dedicated to establishing a democratic republic by means of armed
struggle. Over the next few years this organization carried out or inspired a
number of assassinations and abortive revolts in Vietnam, and Phan Boi Chau was
sentenced to death in absentia. In 1925 he was kidnapped in Shanghai, brought
back to Vietnam and sentenced to hard labor for life. Pardoned by
Governor-General Varenne, he lived under house arrest in Hue until his death.
Phan Boi Chau had made some significant breaks from previous
anticolonial revolts, which had generally been limited to reactionary nativist
perspectives (appeals for loyalty to the Emperor and for the restoration of the
Confucian feudal system). But his social awareness was minimal, his
foreign-based organizations failed to generate any sustained movement within
Vietnam, and his schemes to elicit support from other countries invariably fell
through. His influence was primarily as an inspiring symbol of perseverance in
the struggle for national independence.
He can be contrasted in many ways with his slightly younger
contemporary Phan Chau Trinh (1872-1926). While Phan Boi Chau focused
exclusively on driving out the French without paying much attention to social
questions and was until late in his life quite willing to use monarchism as a
rallying point, Phan Chau Trinh was sharply opposed to monarchism and to the
whole mandarin feudal system and wished to use certain aspects of French culture
to challenge that system and revolutionize traditional Vietnamese society (he
was a great admirer of Rousseau and Montesquieu). Phan Chau Trinh was also
dubious about the advisability of violent struggle against the far superior
French forces, and favored a more gradual strategy centered on education and
cultural issues. Phan Boi Chau pointed out that despite France’s pretense of “civilizing the natives, its colonial system brutally repressed any potentially
subversive education, resisting even rather minimal attempts to foster literacy,
let alone any dissemination of the values of the French Enlightenment. Phan Chau
Trinh was all too aware of that brutality (he had done time at Poulo Condore),
but he noted that the scattered attempts at violent resistance encouraged by
Phan Boi Chau’s groups had led to nothing but horrendous repression and
demoralization.
It should be noted, however, that the two leaders’ strategies
were complementary as well as contradictory. Phan Boi Chau’s organizations had
close connections with free schools and culture centers within Vietnam,
which spread knowledge of modern subjects such as science, geography and history
to thousands of ordinary people and which also served as centers for public
discussion and popular drama and as libraries and publishers, disseminating
subversive poems, songs, satires, and translations of Western works. The most
popular speaker at these centers was Phan Chau Trinh (before he was imprisoned
and then exiled to France).
Phan Chau Trinh’s challenging of traditional values
undoubtedly had a significant influence on the multifaceted cultural ferment of
the 1920s; yet his death in 1926 ironically served as a catalyst for more direct
political confrontations of the sort that he had tried to avoid — confrontations
which were at the same time far more socially complex than the militaristic
attacks that had been envisaged by Phan Boi Chau.
For an informative account of this early period, see David
Marr’s Vietnamese Anticolonialism 1885-1925.
168. “the first printed . . . publication: a reminder of the difficulties of radical publication under the colonial regime. Most leaflets, newsletters, etc., were secretly produced by various crude forms of mimeographing.
169. 1929 . . . Indochinese Communist Party: In 1929 several different communist groups or tendencies existed in various regions of Vietnam, including the Thanh Nien, an Annam Communist Party and an “Indochinese Communist Party. In 1930 most of these groups merged to form the Vietnam Communist Party. On Comintern orders, this name was changed to Indochinese Communist Party (see Note 50). The 1929 Indochinese Communist Party referred to here was the earlier group.174. Naville and Rousset had abandoned the Trotskyist party on the grounds that the Stalinists were carrying out the revolution through their postwar takeover of East Europe and had thereby undermined the basis of the Trotskyist positions. Nguyen Van Linh implied that he and his comrades had not endured the brutal struggles against the Stalinists only to capitulate to them on such a bizarre and flimsy theoretical basis.
179. Quotation from Chinh Phu Ngam (Lament of a Soldier’s Wife), an eighteenth-century poem by Dang Tran Con.
[Chapter 10: Worker in the Promised Land]
185. Au pays d’Héloïse consists of several fragmentary chapters. The excerpts translated in the present book have been rearranged and in a few cases condensed. This paragraph, for example, is a very brief summary of a several-page account in the original book about the tribulations of Vietnamese drafted into European service during World War II. Ngo Van’s friend Dang Van Long later wrote a whole book on the topic: Nguoi Viet o Phap 1940-1954 (The Vietnamese in France, 1940-1954) (Paris: TS Nghien Cuu, 1997).
188. Lines from Baudelaire’s poem L’Horloge (The Clock) (1860).189. Quotation from Marx’s The Poverty of Philosophy (1847), Chapter 1, Part 2.
195. Source of quotation unknown.
[Chapter 11: New Radical Perspectives]
203. ICO: Founded in 1958 (originally under the name Informations et Liaisons Ouvrières), ICO stemmed from a split in the Socialisme ou Barbarie group. After the dissolution of ICO in 1973, some of its participants, including Ngo Van, carried on similar activities and publications in the Échanges et Mouvement network, which was formed in 1975 and is still active.
204. “Little Red Book: Quotations from Chairman Mao. Ngo Van later wrote a critique of this collection and of Maoism in general (see Bibliography, p. 248).
[A Factory Occupation in May 1968]
208. CGT (Confédération Générale du Travail/General Confederation of Labor): national labor union dominated by the French Communist Party.
210. “know how to end a strike: In 1936, during the strikes accompanying the election of the Popular Front, Communist Party leader Maurice Thorez declared, We must recognize when it’s time to terminate a strike if our demands are met, and when it’s time to consent to a compromise if not all of them are won. The French expression, “Il faut savoir terminer une grève, can also be understood as We must know how to end a strike, and ever since that time this accidental confession of union bureaucrats’ actual conservative role has been sarcastically evoked by radical workers.
211. UNEF (Union Nationale des Étudiants de France):
French National Student Union.
March 22nd Movement: eclectic radical student
organization created on March 22, 1968. The anarchist Daniel Cohn-Bendit was its
most famous spokesperson, but it also included Trotskyists, Maoists, etc.
[Reflections on the Vietnam War]
220. Allusion to the International War Crimes Tribunal (1966-1967) organized by Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sartre.
221. The popular sentiment was a widespread anti-Americanism, not only on the part of French Communist Party supporters but also by President de Gaulle, who was striving to carve out an independent position (e.g. by withdrawing France from NATO) and in the process aligning France closer to the Communist bloc.
Translators Notes from Ngo Van’s book In the Crossfire: Adventures of a Vietnamese Revolutionary (AK Press, 2010), prepared by Hélène Fleury and Ken Knabb.
In the Crossfire is a translation of Ngo Van’s Au pays de la Cloche fêlée (Paris: L’Insomniaque, 2000) and of excerpts from Ngo Van’s Au pays d’Héloïse (L’Insomniaque, 2005). It has been edited by Ken Knabb and Hélène Fleury and translated by Hélène Fleury, Hilary Horrocks, Ken Knabb and Naomi Sager.
Bureau of Public Secrets, PO Box 1044, Berkeley CA 94701, USA
www.bopsecrets.org knabb@bopsecrets.org