Next there was history hall. I am aware that there was a lot of resistance to the war, both at home and abroad. Most accounts of that (that I’ve read) don’t follow the logic that the North Vietnamese government did,,, namely “if you’re not FOR the war, surely you support us!” or something like that. But if anyone could compile a museum’s worth of protest photos and sound bites, and assemble them in apparent support for the Communist re-unification cause,,, it’s the War Remembrance Museum.
This museum, as a sidenote, opened to the public as early as 4 September, 1975, and has grown its collection ever since. They didn’t waste any time.
I can’t find on my map where the anti-colonial museum is, or the anti-Japan museum,, or the “keep China out” museum. Huh. Must be a misprint.
This museum, as a sidenote, opened to the public as early as 4 September, 1975, and has grown its collection ever since. They didn’t waste any time.
I can’t find on my map where the anti-colonial museum is, or the anti-Japan museum,, or the “keep China out” museum. Huh. Must be a misprint.
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