Illustration: Dao Tuan |
Speaking of the sacrifices and losses of the Vietnamese youth volunteer force during the resistance war against the US to save the country, there is not only the heroic sacrifice of the ten girls at Dong Loc Intersection or the youth volunteers at Chuong Bon, but also sixty children of Thai Nguyen who fell on December 24, 1972, at Luu Xa Station while performing the task of unloading and clearing goods. Sixty young lives, sixty people with many youthful aspirations, have forever remained at the age of 20. The youth of these men and women has merged into the soil so that the tree of life will always be green.
The 915 Youth Volunteer Company was established in June 1972 with 102 cadres and members, three-quarters of whom were women aged eighteen or twenty. Most of them were children of ethnic minorities from Na Ri, Cho Don, Bach Thong (formerly Bac Kan ) and Dai Tu (Thai Nguyen).
When the 915th Youth Volunteer Company was established, it was tasked with repairing and upgrading National Highway 18 from Gia Bay Bridge to La Hien Commune. Then, the 915th Company switched to serving traffic on Route 16A from Chua Hang to Trai Cau. This was the route for transporting weapons, food, and goods to aid fraternal socialist countries. With this important position, the US imperialists often used aircraft to destroy fiercely in an attempt to cut off our vital cargo transportation route. The 915th Company always maintained the spirit of "Living on the road and bridge. Dying with indomitable fortitude!"
Early in the morning of December 24, 1972, the cadres and members of Company 915 urgently carried out the task of loading and unloading 20,000 tons of food and defense goods that were still in the center of Thai Nguyen city. By dusk, the food and goods that were in the Luu Xa Station had basically been cleared. All day long, they carried and transported goods, military uniforms, and military equipment with great enthusiasm. Before they had time to eat dinner, the B52 bombers rushed in. The devastating bombing devastated Thai Nguyen city, taking the lives of many people, including 60 cadres and members of the 915 Youth Volunteers. Sixty youth volunteer cadres and members remained forever in the motherland, their bodies not intact. They passed away in the sorrow of their families, comrades, and hometown villages. Your sacrifice is a great loss to the Vietnamese Youth Volunteers.
More than half a century has passed, but the loss of that Christmas Eve still haunts those who remain. They still live with painful memories that nothing can compensate for. I choked up and shed tears when I watched the clip of the old soldier sitting quietly beside his lover's grave, his wrinkled hands trembling as he placed them on the tombstone of the girl he loved. That girl forever stopped at the age of 20. Perhaps throughout his life he could not forget that beautiful and painful first love. There are deaths that become immortal. There are loves that are strong and timeless. That soldier carried the love of his youth with him for the rest of his life. That love will forever remain intact in his heart. There are people who sacrificed themselves at the most beautiful age without leaving a single photo for their loved ones. There is a mother with gray hair, the war has been over for half a century but still has not calmed down for a day the pain and longing for her beloved child. Sixty youthful lives, sixty 915 stories have dissolved into the motherland. They lie together in the arms of comrades and the grateful affection of the Thai Nguyen people.
I stood before the portraits of sixty young volunteer martyrs. Looking at their radiant faces and bright smiles like wild flowers, I could not help but choke up. They were like light cranes flying towards the white clouds, but the pain never subsided in the hearts of those who stayed behind. To have a prosperous and peaceful life like today, there were so many Vietnamese people who left forever and never returned, so many mothers and wives turned to stone, waiting for their husbands and children.
More than 50 years have passed, but the 915 fire will forever be an epic for today and tomorrow. You are immortal flowers, forever green at the age of twenty. The painful losses caused by war remind each of us to cherish every moment of peace today.
Source: https://baothainguyen.vn/van-nghe-thai-nguyen/202507/nhung-bong-hoa-bat-tu-ed52749/
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