The Day it Snowed in 
    Vietnam: a true story
    (Christmas in Vietnam, 1969)
    by Jim Schueckler
Major Higginbotham, the company commander, was in 
    the operations bunker. I explained our plan but he answered: "We don't have 
    the Da Lat MACV's mission.
    In fact, there are no missions; there's a cease-fire tomorrow . . 
    .remember?"
    
    It had been Mike's idea, but the prospect of not being able to make this 
    mission was too much, so I pleaded the cause: "Please, Sir, could you call 
    battalion and see if some other company has Da Lat MACV's?" MACV's, the 
    Military Assistance Command Vietnam was the US Army unit of advisors to the 
    Army of the Republic of Vietnam. One or two US advisors were assigned to 
    small military compounds in almost every large village. A MACV's mission 
    usually meant flying the province Senior Advisor around to visit the 
    villages.  MACV's missions were a respite from the tension and danger of 
    combat assaults or recon team missions, but had their own risks of weather, 
    wind, and being without gunship escort. Flying near the beautiful city of Da 
    Lat, up in the cool mountains, was an additional treat.
    
    The CO picked up the phone and then started writing on a mission sheet form. 
    He handed it to me and said, "Da Lat MACV's helipad, oh seven thirty; We 
    Took the mission from the 92nd." He opened his wallet, and handed me some 
    money.
    "Here. Good luck!"
    
    When we reached the gunship platoon hooch three pilots looked on sadly as 
    One man raked a pile of money across the table towards himself. We made our 
    sales pitch about the hospital. The lucky gambler pushed the money towards 
    us and said: "Here--take it! I'd just lose it all back to these guys anyway, 
    Merry Christmas!"
    
    Similar responses began to fill our ammo can with money of all Denominations 
    as we roamed among hooches and tents, collecting money from guys whose 
    generosity began to make me a believer in the Christmas spirit again. At one 
    stop, a pilot gave us a gift package of cheese. Food! We could take food! We 
    decided to make another pass through the company area, asking for cookies, 
    candy, and other things. As we left one hooch with our arms full, the men 
    inside started singing "Deck the Halls," and soon those in other buildings 
    were competing. Christmas Eve had arrived in this tropical land of heat and 
    snakes and death!
    
    When we reached the mess hall, the cooks were still there, preparing for 
    Christmas Day. The mess sergeant replied: "Do you have a truck with you? We 
    have a surplus of food because so many guys went home early." One pilot went 
    to get the maintenance truck while the rest of us checked dates on cans and 
    cartons of food. Then we drove to the infantry mess hall where we accepted 
    four cases of freeze-dried foods. The medic at the dispensary gave us 
    bandages and dressings.
We tied down the pile of booty in the Huey. After returning the truck, the four pilots walked together back to our hooch. One looked at his watch and said, "Hey guys! It's midnight. Merry Christmas!"
My alarm clock startled me out of a deep sleep. A check with my wristwatch verified the time, but something was wrong. There was no shouting, no rumble of trucks, no roar of propellers and rotors. Mornings were usually bustling with the sounds of men and machines preparing for the daily business of war, but today there were no such sounds. I thought to myself, "Is this what peace sounds like?"
In the shower building, Mike and I talked about 
    what our families would be doing today on the other side of the world. As 
    all short timers do, I reminded Mike that in just two weeks I would be going 
    home, my year in Vietnam over. My wife promised me another Christmas 
    celebration, with decorated tree and wrapped presents. I would be also be 
    meeting another Mike for the first time, my son, now only a few months old.
    
    After breakfast, the others went to the flight line while I called for a 
    weather briefing. When I reached the helicopter, Mike was doing the 
    preflight inspection and had just climbed up to the top of the Huey. 
    Together, we checked the main rotor hub and the "Jesus nut" that holds the 
    rotor on the helicopter. Everything was fine; we were ready to fly. We took 
    off and headed for the mountains.
    
    It always felt good to fly with this crew; we were a finely tuned team. The 
    rugged and muscular Lee looked every bit like a cowboy from his hometown in 
    Bascom County, Wyoming; hence his nickname "Bad Bascom." He was the crew 
    chief of this Huey and did all the daily maintenance on it; it was his 
    "baby." With Mike as copilot and Dave as door gunner, we had taken that 
    helicopter into and out of many difficult situations, from landing supplies 
    on a windy mountain top to extracting recon teams from small clearings
    while taking enemy fire. The radio call sign of the 192nd Assault Helicopter 
    Company was Polecat; we were Polecat Three Five Six and proud of it. This 
    day was beginning to feel even better because we were going to use our 
    combat skills for a mission that seemed so unrelated to war.
I decided to climb higher than usual in the smooth 
    morning air. As we left the jungle plains along the coast, the green 
    mountains of the Central Highlands rose up to meet us. On the plateau, a 
    thick blanket of fog lay like cotton under a Christmas tree. It spilled over 
    between the peaks in slow, misty, waterfalls. In the rising sunlight the 
    mountain tops cast long shadows on the fog. The beauty and serenity of the 
    scene were dazzling. Had I noticed this before? I think I had, but today the 
    gorgeous scenery wasn't a backdrop for the unexpected horror of war.
    
    The mess hall had been quiet. The airfield was quiet. The radios were quiet. 
    We weren't even chattering on the intercom as we usually did. Our minds were 
    all with different families, somewhere back home, thousands of miles away. 
    Everything was quiet and peaceful. It felt very, very, strange. Was this the 
    first day of a lasting peace, or just the eye in a hurricane of war?
As our main rotor slowed down after we landed at Da 
    Lat, a gray-haired Lieutenant Colonel walked up to the Huey. "Merry 
    Christmas! I'm Colonel Beck. We have a busy day planned, my men are spread 
    out all over this province, and we're going to take mail, hot turkey, and 
    pumpkin pies to every one of them!" He handed me a map that had our 
    cross-stitched route already carefully drawn on it. His distinguished look 
    turned to a big grin as he added, "Oh--would you guys like to have some 
    Donut Dollies with us today?" Four heads with flight helmets were eagerly 
    nodding "YES" as the two young ladies got out of a jeep.
    
    Donut Dollies were American Red Cross volunteers, college graduates in their 
    early twenties. Although no longer distributing donuts like their namesakes 
    of World War I, they were still in the service of helping the morale of the 
    troops. At large bases they managed recreation centers but they also 
    traveled to the smaller units in the field for short visits. For millions of 
    GIs they represented the girlfriend, sister, or wife back home. Over the 
    Huey's intercom, Colonel Beck introduced Sue, with the short, dark, hair and 
    Ann, s brunette, the taller one.
Soon we were heading towards the mountains with a Huey full of mail, food, Christmas cargo, and two American young women. For the soldiers who had been living off Vietnamese food and canned Army rations at lonely, isolated outposts, these touches of home would be a welcome surprise.
As we approached the first compound Colonel Beck, by radio, told the men on the ground that we were going to make it snow. Sue and Ann sprinkled laundry soap flakes out of the Huey as we flew directly over a small group of American and Vietnamese soldiers who must have thought we were crazy. Several of them were rubbing their eyes as we came back to land. I will never know if it was emotion or if they just had soap in their eyes.
The three Americans came over to the Huey as we 
    shut it down. Ann gave each
    of them a package from the Red Cross and Sue called out names to distribute
    the mail. After about 15 minutes of small talk, Colonel Beck announced, "We
    have a lot more stops to make" and got back into the Huey. The soldiers 
    stood
    there silently, staring at us as we started up, hovered, and then 
    disappeared
    into the sky.
    
    At the next outpost, Colonel Beck left us so he could talk privately with 
    the local officials. The crew and I didn't mind escorting the Donut Dollies. 
    It was easy to see how happy the soldiers were to talk with them. I wondered 
    how Sue and Ann were feeling. Their job was to cheer up other people on what 
    may have been their own first Christmas away from home; if they were lonely 
    or sad, they never let it show. Throughout the day, the same scene was 
    replayed at other small compounds. Some soldiers talked excitedly to the 
    girls, while others would just stand quietly and stare, almost in shock to 
    see American women visiting them out in the boonies.
    
    Finally, with the official MACV's work finished, we were above the hospital 
    at Dam Pao. Mike landed us a few hundred feet from the main building. 
    Several men and women came out, carrying folding stretchers. They first 
    showed surprise that we were not bringing an injured new patient, and then 
    joy when we showed them the food and medical supplies. Mike opened the ammo 
    can full of money and said, "Merry Christmas from the Polecats and 
    Tiger sharks of the 192nd Assault Helicopter Company." One of the women began 
    to cry and then hugged Mike.
    
    A doctor asked if we would like to see the hospital. He talked as we carried 
    the goods from the Huey to the one-floor, tin-roof hospital building. 
    "Project Concern now has volunteer doctors and nurses from England, 
    Australia, and the USA. We provide health services to civilians and train 
    medical assistants to do the same in their own villages. We try to 
    demonstrate God's love, so we remain neutral. Both sides respect our work, 
    and leave us alone."
    
    One of the women described a recent event. Two nurses and a medical 
    assistant student were returning from a remote clinic in the jungle when their jeep 
    became mired in mud. Many miles from even the smallest village, they knew 
    that they would not be able to walk to civilization before dark. A Viet Cong 
    foot patrol came upon them, pulled the jeep out of the mud, and sent them on 
    their way.
    
    There were homemade Christmas decorations everywhere; most made on the spot
    by patients or their families. Inside, the hospital was clean and neat, but 
    stark; there were few pieces of modern equipment. The staff lived in a 
    separate small building.
    
    As we moved into one ward, a nurse gently lifted a very small baby from its 
    bed, and before I could stop her, she placed him in my arms. He'd been born 
    that morning. Although they had expected complications, the mother and baby 
    were perfectly healthy! As I held the tiny infant, I started to tell the 
    others that I would soon be meeting my own baby son, but the words got stuck 
    in my throat. So I just stood there, marveling at the warmth and hope in 
    that tiny new human being nestled peacefully in my arms. Would this child 
    grow up in peace, or would this tiny life be snuffed out by a war that had
    already claimed thousands of Vietnamese and Americans? Would the deaths of 
    my
    friends this past year help ensure for him a life of peace and freedom, or 
    had they
    died in vain?
    
    The staff invited us to stay for supper with them, and I could tell the 
    invitation was sincere. However, the sun was getting low, and I didn't want 
    to fly us home over eighty miles of mountainous jungle in the dark. I also 
    would have felt guilty to take any food, even so graciously offered, from 
    the most selfless people I had ever met. As we started the Huey, the doctors 
    and nurses were about fifty feet away, still talking with Colonel Beck. The 
    Colonel took something out of his wallet and gave it to of one of the men
    with a double-hand handshake. He then quietly climbed on board. There was no 
    chatter on the intercom as we flew back to Da Lat. Mike landed the Huey 
    softly. I asked him to shut down and got out quickly. Then we all stood 
    there silently; I wanted to hug Sue and Ann, but I knew Donut Dollies were 
    not allowed to hug. Instead, we all exchanged warm handshakes and Christmas 
    wishes. Colonel Beck thanked us for taking him to the hospital.
We, the crew of Polecat 356, got back in and flew 
    away and out of the lives of
    our new-found friends. Silence also marked the flight back to Phan Thiet. I 
    thought of my family and friends back home and couldn't wait to see them. I 
    also thought about the good friends I would soon be leaving behind, and 
    other good friends who would never go home to their families.
    
    I reflected on the rare nature of the day. I would always be able to 
    remember Christmas Day in Vietnam as very special. Here, in the midst of 
    war, trouble, and strife, was a time of sharing, happiness, love -- and 
    peace.
Epilog: I attended the 1993 dedication of the 
    Vietnam Women's Memorial to place letters of remembrance from the Vietnam 
    Helicopter Pilots Association.
    
    As friendly and helpful as 24 years earlier, other Donut Dollies were eager 
    to help me find Sue and Ann, identified from a photograph I had taken at Dam 
    Pao in 1969. One Donut Dolly finally exclaimed: "That's my sister!" and led 
    me to Ann, and I collected on a long-overdue hug. Sue and I talked by 
    telephone a few days later. I felt good to learn that Christmas Day in 
    Vietnam was also special to them.
    
    Project Concern International, 3550 Afton Road San Diego, CA 92123 is still
    doing similar humanitarian work in Asia and several US cities. Permission is 
    hereby granted to copy for non-profit use.
*** USMA1976 post by: ADAMS Paul 1976 Owner
    
    paul.adams@millenniumautomation.com>