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News / Nation & World

‘Operation’ Babylift’ kids, soldiers reunite

Orphans taken out of Vietnam in 1975 meet their rescuers

The Columbian
Published: April 25, 2015, 5:00pm

HOLMDEL, N.J. — With the Viet Cong making their final push toward taking Saigon in April 1975, the fate of thousands of Vietnamese orphans was uncertain until President Gerald Ford ordered remaining forces to evacuate the children.

Forty years after the final flight of Operation Babylift left Vietnam, 20 evacuees and their adopted families gathered Saturday for a reunion along with some of the servicemen who took part in the rescue.

“Operation Babylift is one of the few great things to come from the Vietnam tragedy,” said Lana Mae Noone, organizer of the event at New Jersey’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

Noone also is the founder of the website Vietnam Babylift, which aims to connect adoptees, their families and veterans involved with the mission. In all, 2,547 children were rescued and adopted by families in the United States and allied countries.

Noone, 68, of Garden City, New York, adopted her two daughters — Heather and Jennifer — after they were among the last children evacuated to the U.S. Heather developed pneumonia en route to America and died in May 1975.

“I promised her I would make sure babylift would never be forgotten,” Noone said.

Participants dedicated a plaque inscribed with the names of 138 children, volunteers and soldiers who perished when their C-5A Galaxy crashed while headed to Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Greg Gmerek, a medic for the 9th Air Evac Squadron, survived.

“Mud was flying at me and I went flying around all over the place” recalled Gmerek, who was not strapped in because all the seats were strapped with two children a piece. “We just started getting the babies out as best we could.”

Gmerek said he broke six ribs and had a partially collapsed lung from the crash. “I thought about them all the time,” Gmerek said of the children.

Kim Lan Duong said she was orphaned in the streets of Saigon before being flown to Detroit during Operation Babylift, where she was adopted and raised by her single mother and grandmother, Sandy and Violet Howard.

“To be able to see adult adoptees, it warms their hearts to see us grown up,” said Duong, 43, who now lives in Dallas. “They still call us kids and that’s OK.”

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