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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Doan View Hoat

Interviewed January 7, 2011

First, before 1975, I got a scholarship to go to study in America. And I got a Ph.D in 1971, and I came back to South Vietnam with my wife and our first son to work at Van Hanh University. It´s a private Buddhist university. And as a vice rector of the university, we tried to improve the curriculum and the administration of the university. We took model of American university.

So after 1975 I decided to stay home because I thought that we didn´t have war any longer, so I hoped that we could do something for the country. But then they closed all private university – the communists – and they put me in jail in 1976 accusing me of “Americanizing” Van Hanh University.

So they put me in the prison for 12 years without any trial; I don´t think that they had a very good reason to imprison me. But perhaps because the situation at that time was very difficult for them, so they kept us in jail – myself and many other intellectuals in South Vietnam, and writers and politicians – for 12 years.

And I was released in 1988, just beginning to see what´s happening in Eastern Europe countries and Soviet Union. And so I thought this is a chance for pushing for democracy and freedom for Vietnam, pushing the Communist party to accept changes in politics and culture. So some of my friends and myself, we decided to edit what we called Freedom Forum underground newsletter to advocate democracy and human rights for Vietnam. And we did it for about one year and a half. And they discovered us. And then they put me in jail again in 1990.