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Vietnamese-American Returns to
Birthplace — USS Tarawa
By Specialist 2nd
Class Mark Logico, Navy Public Affairs
Posted on December 6, 2010
Send comments about this article to
PEARL HARBOR (NNS)
-- A 31-year-old Vietnamese-American woman returned to
her place of birth, the decommissioned amphibious
assault ship USS Tarawa (LHA 1), presently moored at the
Naval Inactive Ships Maintenance Facility, Joint Base
Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Nov. 29.
"This is wonderful," said Grace Tarawa Tran, who was
born aboard Tarawa on May 10, 1979, two days after 442
other Vietnamese refugees were rescued in the South
China Sea. Being born on U.S. property, Tran immediately
became a U.S. citizen. "I never thought this day would
come. Meeting all the Marines, coming to see the ship
where I was born on, my parents told me a lot of
stories. I just never really imagined that this would
happen."
Tran was later taken by surprise when the corpsman who
delivered her joined her on the flight deck of the ship.
Navy Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Richard Reed, "Doc
Reed" as he was referred to back then, was assigned to
the Marine Corps' Battalion Landing Team (BLT) 2/3,
attached to Tarawa at the time, when the ship was
performing the humanitarian rescue effort that rescued
the Vietnamese refugees.
Story continued
below.
"It's wonderful," said Reed who hasn't seen Tran since
he delivered her aboard the ship. "She has grown to be a
pretty lady. It's amazing that one day you're holding
her in your arms, and then the next day she's fully
grown."
When Tran's mother gave birth, Reed wrapped Tran up and
attended to the infant's needs.
"She seemed like my own child, a daughter from a
different country."
Tran cried as Reed revealed himself to her and presented
her with flowers and copies of pictures and news
clipping of the eventful day. Reed showed Tran old
pictures of the day of the rescue, the birth and the
days that followed, most of which she has never seen
before.
"The events, my experiences with the BLT and seeing the
suffering the Vietnamese went through, it changed my
life," said Reed. "That's why I'm a pastor today. I've
been a pastor now for the past 26 years, and it was all
because of this young lady right here. It was a change
in my life. It was an unexpected surprise especially for
me as a corpsman. I was used to taking care of Marines,
sewing them up, giving them shots, taking them to sick
call, but delivering a baby— that was a brand new
experience. It was a once in a lifetime experience. She
was my first and my last."
Tran said she was also overwhelmed meeting Reed as the
two went through the photo album that showed photos of
other Vietnamese refugees and the wooden motor boat that
they were on.
"There are no words that can express how grateful we are
for the aid and comfort that all of you provided us
while aboard the USS Tarawa," said Tran. "My family
along with 400 other Vietnamese citizens fled Vietnam in
search for a better life. They fled on a 20 feet wooden
motor boat, which later malfunctioned. While adrift,
they were robbed by Thai pirates eleven separate times
over the course of a week. Condition on the boat was
horrible, and they had very little food and water to
consume. Exhaustion and hunger took over them that they
no longer feared for their lives. So, you can only
imagine the joy they felt when the U.S. military came to
their rescue."
Despite the end of the Vietnam War with the Fall of
Saigon on April 30, 1975, waves of South Vietnamese
refugees escaped the war-torn country in search of a
better life. More than two million people fled Vietnam
in small, unsafe crowded boats ending up in countries
like Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines.
"My parents wanted to get away from the war and the
communism," said Tran. "So they, along with 400 others,
fled Vietnam. They did not know which nation they were
going to, they just wanted to escape Vietnam. My mother
said she was really scared, but this was the opportunity
to leave Vietnam and find freedom. They took a really
big risk."
After the rescue at sea, Tarawa delivered Tran and the
refugees to an asylum camp in Thailand where they began
the process of immigrating to the U.S. Tran said that in
three months the refugees were divided up and
distributed to several states. Tran's family was
eventually immigrated to Philadelphia, PA.
Today, Tran works as a financial analyst for an
insurance company in Philadelphia.
Decommissioned in March 2009, Tarawa was the lead
amphibious assault ship, and the second ship to be named
after Tarawa Atoll, a site of a Marine landing during
World War II. Tarawa is currently moored in West Loch,
Pearl Harbor, and is considered a retention asset for
the U.S. Navy.


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