Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Hoa Lo Prison Memorial Garden

2009,  Hanoi,  Vietnam,  Hoa Lo Prison, Hanoi Hilton, memorial,  travelThis photo was taken in 2009 at Hoa Lo Prison in Hanoi, Vietnam. Hoa Lo Prison was used by the French to house Vietnamese revolutionaries and later gained infamy in America as the prison that American POWs sarcastically referred to as the "Hanoi Hilton." The memorial garden is a tribute to all of the Vietnamese who died at the hands of their French captors. The French were exceptionally brutal, keeping Vietnamese prisoners chained to a large, flat table by their ankles then torturing them and executing them by means of the guillotine. The words on the wall mean, "High Indomitable Patience - Eternal Glory."

1 comment:

Jenny Landis said...

I wish I had spent more time in Hanoi...but I got to see a lot of Saigon. Ho Chi Minh City is pretty rad....Oh how do I miss Pho.