On this date in 1968, the U.S. Army meted out the signature single atrocity of the Vietnam War, the My Lai Massacre — wanton slaughter of 400 to 500 Vietnamese civilians over the span of four evil hours that would emerge as practically metonymous for twenty evil years in Indochina.
Combat photographer Ronald Haeberle shot a number of pictures on that day, although by his own admission he also failed to intervene against the slaughter and he destroyed some of the most incriminating shots. Nevertheless, his iconic photo of bodies heaped on a path became the iconic antiwar poster “And babies”.
The hero on that day was an American helicopter pilot who, seeing the slaughter unfolding, set his warship down in front of his wilding countrymen and trained guns upon them to still their rampage, then escorted several Vietnamese people next in line for murder to his choppers and whisked them to safety. The late Hugh Thompson revisited the site of the massacre for 30th anniversary commemorations and told a U.S. reporter,
“One of the ladies that we had helped out that day came up to me and asked, ‘Why didn’t the people who committed these acts come back with you?’ And I was just devastated. And then she finished her sentence: she said, ‘So we could forgive them.’ I’m not man enough to do that. I’m sorry. I wish I was, but I won’t lie to anybody. I’m not that much of a man.” (Source)
On this day..
- 1984: James Hutchins
- 1841: The Jewboy's Gang
- 1946: Max Blokzijl, voice of Dutch fascism
- 1868: Eleven samurai, for the Sakai Incident
- 1773: Lewis Hutchinson, "the most detestable and abandoned villain"
- 1789: Not Mary Wade, 11-year-old thief
- 1649: Saint Jean de Brébeuf, missionary to the Huron
- 1677: Thomas Sadler and William Johnson, mace thieves
- 1244: Two hundred-plus Cathars at Montsegur
- 37: Some poor wretches, despite the death of Tiberius
- 2005: Mohammed Bijeh, the desert vampire
- 1457: László Hunyadi, the death before Hungary's rebirth