My Life Is Jane Fonda 




http://berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2011-08-24/article/38293?headline=My-Life-Is-Jane-Fonda
 







By Cristina Doan 


Thursday August 18, 2011 




I feel really confused after meeting Jane Fonda last night and having her 
answer my question about the Vietnam War. 

Basically, she was in Berkeley last night to promote her new book about being 
healthy and aging nicely, I guess. And she kept repeating to the audience: 
"Stay positive. Always think positive thoughts." 

So index cards were circulating in the audience. The talk took place in a 
church--in the middle of Berkeley's so-called "Jesus Jungle" of churches 
sprawled around a cross-street near a residence hall. The index cards were 
meant for us to write our questions down to Jane Fonda and she would read them 
aloud and answer them. I guess it sped up the question-asking process and kept 
things a bit more anonymous. 

I wrote something along the lines of: 

"I appreciate your efforts during the Vietnam War to stop all the killing. 
However, my family remains dysfunctional after the war, with more people in my 
family going to jail than to college. How can I 'stay positive' as I pay for a 
UC Berkeley education on my own without any support from my family?" 

The audience had a dramatic "oh my" hum throughout the dark church. She seemed 
to stumble a bit, probably thinking about how guilty she felt for assisting 
North Vietnam as they slaughtered my South Vietnamese brothers and sisters. 

"Well, first off," she said. "I would like to say that I have been to other 
countries that were at war with the US, and that they always said something 
like, 'Go home Yankee' [when they saw Americans]. I never sensed that among the 
Vietnamese people. You come from a beautiful country and are a beautiful, 
Vietnamese person. Have gratitude for that. Be grateful that you come from a 
country so beautiful and so forgiving and so brave...I think, thinking about 
the fact that you're alive, that you are at UC Berkeley, that you can pay your 
way through Berkeley, gratitude that you are in that situation...I would just 
be grateful for all the things you already have." 

I have to be honest here. Having a renowned, famous actress address my humble 
"Vietnamese self" was inspiring at first. I bought into the hype of her bubbly, 
cheerleader demeanor. Her preaching of, "It doesn't matter how old you are, you 
can still have a rockin' body like me...even though I used to be anorexic and 
bulimic. Oh, and I've never done research in my life and was a drop out, but 
now I'm just starting and I'm so smart and BUY MY BOOK OR ELSE YOU WON'T GET AN 
AUTOGRAPH." I was hypnotized by my surroundings, of older people nodding their 
heads in agreement to everything she said. And feeling like the coolest fucking 
young person there for even knowing who Jane Fonda was. 

After the autograph and the picture with her--after the glam was over, I was 
brought back to reality. 

She literally told me to be grateful for what I have. Which is fine, but...has 
she not owned up to her actions in North Vietnam? If she really wanted the 
killing to stop back then, I don't think going to North Vietnam and sitting on 
artillery guns to shoot down airplanes was the best choice. How am I supposed 
to feel about that? 

Well, I guess I don't have a choice because constantly--over and fucking 
over--people who are NOT Vietnamese are telling ME how to feel about that 
god-damned war. When I mourn for the three million Vietnamese that were killed 
in the Vietnam War, I am seen as a self-pitying, self-victimizing type. When I 
say, "Hmm, maybe it was a cool hip thing to do back in those days to support 
Communism. So maybe that's why Jane Fonda went to North Vietnam," I'm 
considered a Communist and a traitor to the non-Communist South Vietnamese 
people. 

Maybe I just wanted to feel grateful for what I have. Given the cards dealt to 
me, I've done a fucking good job. Straight A's, two sources of income, being 
featured in every Bay Area newspaper and news channel you can think of for 
standing-up-for-what-I-believe-in...the list goes on. I'm grateful for that. 

What I'm NOT grateful for are people who refuse to research the facts before 
they do something detrimental to another country. I wonder if Jane Fonda knew a 
damn first thing about what her actions in North Vietnam would mean to us South 
Vietnamese. I know the South Vietnamese were not all comprised of angels 
either, but what the fuck did she do there that was so important and 
life-changing for the politics of a war-torn country? She's pretty. Yes. She's 
rich. Yes. She knows how to market a book. Yes. 

But does she know how to reconcile the tremendous pain felt in the heart of the 
only young, Vietnamese girl in the audience, who still carries the trauma of 
her Vietnamese refugee aunts, uncles, parents, and grandparents? 

I wanted to go back in time, before I was even born, and run through the 
jungles of Vietnam--stopping all the bullets shot and taking away every bomb 
and Agent Orange and rapist fuck of a soldier targeted at innocent Vietnamese 
brothers and sisters. 

Instead, I walked out of the church Jane Fonda spoke in, stuck in a Jesus 
Jungle and a country that has no heart or conscience about the three million 
Vietnamese slaughtered during the war--and the millions of survivors and 
descendants of the war who can't simply forget the pain that has consumed their 
lives. 

My Life Is Jane Fonda. 





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