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Vietnam war hospital
Vietnam war hospital









vietnam war hospital

To this day, he is an active volunteer in the Malteser Hilfsdienst.Although they created less drama than Dustoff, many other medical advances took place during the Vietnam War that helped save countless lives and limbs. Thomas Reuther continues to travel regularly to Vietnam – visiting the orphanage in Da Nang. It was 1989 before the Malteser aid workers were able to return to Vietnam, today, Malteser International remains active in the country, primarily in the field of disaster risk reduction, and in promoting inclusion for disabled people. He flew back to Vietnam for the Maltesers twice more, but by 1975, the security situation had deteriorated so severely that the then-Secretary General Georg von Truszczynski ordered staff to evacuate in March. At the time there was no training, no education available for the work that I was doing. I didn’t have ‘aid worker syndrome’, I wanted to organized things all the time – I had something more like ‘organizer syndrome’, which I could live out at the time. Over the years, the Maltesers responsibilities in Vietnam grew to include a school, a school for the blind, refugee camps, mobile ambulance stations, a leprosy clinic, an old people’s home, and an orphanage. Allowing the Vietnamese themselves to take over the task of providing medical care in the long term was planned from the beginning on, and Malteser personnel were also responsible for training hospital staff. Hospital staff were required to observe absolute neutrality towards both of the conflict parties.” To this day, the principle of neutrality remains deeply embedded in Malteser International’s approach to providing aid in conflict zones around the world.ĭuring the nine years of the Malteser deployment to Vietnam, they also established a variety of teaching workshops for metalworkers, carpenters, and car mechanics in the Province of Quang Nam. The unshakeable rule was that uniforms were to be left outside. “All of the hospital’s patients received equal treatment – whatever their background or politics. That’s the absurdity of war,” said Reuther. Straight away, twenty American soldiers came to the hospital and donated blood for our patients – that is, for the people that they might have wounded that very morning. I drove to the American camp there and then, and told them the situation. At one point when the doctors had no blood reserves, for example, I was responsible for making sure that more was available. “Everything organizational was my responsibility.

vietnam war hospital

The Maltesers operated three hospitals in Vietnam, and as Team Leader, Thomas Reuther was responsible for making sure that the medical staff had the time and resources at hand to do their jobs. They had an unbelievable moral responsibility, and to this day I have nothing but respect for them,” said Reuther. The doctors had to decide instantly what kind of chances they had – who should be the first to get help, and who was already beyond helping. They brought people with all kinds of wounds and injuries. That’s why the sound is inseparable with Vietnam in my mind. “They used to bring patients to our hospitals in helicopters.

vietnam war hospital

Thomas Reuther was in Vietnam between 19, working as team leader in Da Nang – a port city that now lies in the center of the country, but which then lay on the frontline between North and South Vietnam. In order to provide legal security for the deployment, the Maltesers founded the Malteser Foreign Aid Service as a registered voluntary association – beginning a tradition of overseas aid missions that would culminate in the establishment of Malteser International as the Order of Malta’s worldwide humanitarian aid organization. The German government asked the Maltesers to take part in the country’s large-scale humanitarian mission to Vietnam in January 1966. He was one of the 303 Malteser doctors, nurses, medical staff, trainers, and administrators who worked to help civilians between September 1966 and March 1975 during the war between the Communist North and American-supported South in what was then the Maltesers’ largest overseas deployment to date. Now 71, he was a 26 year-old public administration graduate in 1971, when he applied to work for the Foreign Aid Service of the German Malteser Hilfsdienst in Vietnam.

vietnam war hospital

That has never left me,” said Thomas Reuther. “Whenever I hear a helicopter I think about Vietnam – even today.

  • 50 Years in Vietnam: Politics stays at the hospital door.










  • Vietnam war hospital