[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 565 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 565
Recognizing the historical significance and the heroic struggles and
sacrifices of the Vietnamese people who fled their war-torn country by
boat and other means in search of freedom and democracy.
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IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
June 30, 2023
Mr. Correa submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary
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RESOLUTION
Recognizing the historical significance and the heroic struggles and
sacrifices of the Vietnamese people who fled their war-torn country by
boat and other means in search of freedom and democracy.
Whereas, after the Fall of Saigon in 1975 marked the end to the Vietnam war,
many Vietnamese civilians were stripped from their basic human freedoms,
such as freedom of speech, freedom of press, and freedom of religion,
and even faced relentless discrimination in their own homeland;
Whereas many Vietnamese civilians feared the possible reality of reeducation
camps where conditions were life-threatening and torturous; meanwhile,
farmlands, personal possessions, and private commerce were all
eradicated and regulated under the new Vietnamese regime;
Whereas, following the end of the Vietnam war, from 1975 to 1992, approximately
1,200,000 Vietnamese refugees fled their country by boat or ship seeking
a better future because of the bleakness of their reality;
Whereas while 900,000 Vietnamese refugees made it safely to shore, about 300,000
refugees were lost at sea;
Whereas, as Vietnamese refugees took the opportunity to flee by boat, all faced
daunting fears and unforeseeable challenges such as starvation,
dehydration, illness, drowning, kidnapping and killings by pirates,
overcrowded boats, unpredictable weather, or simply failure to reach
shore;
Whereas while thousands of Vietnamese refugees found shelter at refugee camps
within those Southeast Asian countries, a great majority of people
fleeing by boat were resettled in developed countries, such as the
United States, Canada, Italy, France, West Germany, the United Kingdom,
and Australia, to begin their new lives;
Whereas approximately 800,000 Vietnamese refugees who fled persecution resettled
in the United States;
Whereas an estimated 1,700,000 Vietnamese Americans currently reside in the
United States, making the United States home to the largest number of
individuals of Vietnamese descent outside of Vietnam;
Whereas Vietnamese Americans are the fourth-largest Asian-American population in
the United States;
Whereas first- and second-generation Vietnamese Americans have overcome
tremendous socioeconomic challenges, including discrimination, language
and cultural barriers, and poverty, to emerge as significant
contributors to American society; and
Whereas Vietnamese Americans contribute to American society through their work
in business, education, science and technology, engineering,
mathematics, literature and the arts, gastronomy, the Armed Forces, and
public service at every level of government: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives to
recognize the hardships, sacrifice, and heroism of the Vietnamese
refugees who fled their country by boat and other means 45 years ago,
since April 30, 1975, and to applaud their accomplishments and
significant contributions to the United States since their
resettlement.
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