Vietnam
Vets Gaining Back Pride, Medals
Associated Press | August
05, 2005
PROVIDENCE,
R.I. - Still in his Army greens, William Tallerdy barely had both feet back on American soil when a
man came up to him, demanding to know if he was returning from Vietnam. Then, right there in the airport, the heckler punched the veteran in the
face.
Tallerdy exploded. The police and his relatives had to restrain him.
Soon after, he threw out his war ribbons. That was 1967.
"I was always proud of my military service," said Tallerdy, who is now 57
and lives in Cheyenne, Wyo. "It was just that people made me feel like scum."
Tallerdy wasn't alone. Many returning Vietnam veterans, faced with a hostile
public, threw out their medals. Some, like former Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, even did it in public as an
act of protest. Others simply tossed them in drawers and foot lockers - if out of sight, perhaps out of mind.
Four decades and a nation friendlier to the military, though, have helped
a number of veterans come to terms with their service. Now, they regard their medals with a renewed sense of pride - and are
replacing them or dusting them off.
"We made peace with the former enemy," said Bob Kerrey, a former Nebraska
senator who earned the Medal of Honor in Vietnam. "And we made peace with a former enemy that had defeated us, which is extremely
hard to do."
Tallerdy requested his Purple Heart medal a few years ago. Today, the replacement
is in a cabinet alongside eagle figurines, dog tags and other war memorabilia.
The Pentagon doesn't keep statistics on replacement medals, according to
spokeswoman Lt. Col. Ellen Krenke. The anecdotal evidence from the veterans themselves, however, suggests the numbers are
high.
While Tallerdy displays his Purple Heart in his living room, William Muns
shows off his honors - among them the Good Conduct and Vietnam service medals - on the wall of his office in Beaver County,
Pa., where he is the county's director of veterans affairs.
Muns had stashed his medals and his uniform inside a foot locker when he
came home in January 1968. He wanted to move on. He never talked about the war, not even with his family.
Then, five years ago, his wife brought his medals out and created a shadow
box for him.
"'You were there. You were exposed. You were put in harm's way,'" Muns recalled
her telling him.
Many who served in Vietnam, Muns said, are in the process of "coming out"
as the passage of time has changed feelings about that war.
"Today we're showing ourselves because we want those men that are active
right now to know that they are welcome and they are being supported," Muns said.
Honored though he was, John Wallace packed up his medals because he just
didn't want to relive that moment when he helped men out of a downed helicopter before a B-52 strike.
That changed in 1989 when Wallace began doing advocacy work for veterans.
"The doors started opening up in my mind," Wallace said. "I was feeling
better, I was relating more to my brothers in arms than I was to the civilians."
Now, he's president of the Vietnam Veterans of America state council in
Maine and keeps his medals, which include the Bronze Star and Air Medal, on the wall in his computer room.
"They see that and it sort of makes them feel better," Wallace said of younger
veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. "They can ask about how I got them, I can explain to them how I got them. It makes them
feel better because what I went through was maybe worse than what they went through."
Tallerdy traveled to Branson, Mo., last month for the first Operation Homecoming
USA, a weeklong tribute to Vietnam veterans. The experience moved him profoundly.
"I think now," he said, "it's almost become prestigious to say that
you're a Vietnam veteran."
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