World

The Most Australian Story to Ever Come Out of Vietnam

The Australia Letter is a weekly newsletter from our Australia bureau. Sign up to get it by email.

The first hotel I ever fell in love with was the Metropole, an old-world gem in Vietnam’s capital, Hanoi. My wife and I stayed there in 2007 on a break from covering the war in Iraq, and between the plush beds, the deep-ended pool in a quiet courtyard, and the rich history of the place as a hub of activity during the Vietnam War, we were smitten.

When we returned to Hanoi recently, we stayed there again, and quite unexpectedly, we found an Australian story for the ages — a story that confirmed my appreciation for the secrets that hotels hold, and the way Australians make their way through the world.

It has to do with a bunker.

When we checked in, we were asked if we wanted to join a free tour. So, on our last night, we followed a guide named Tom on an hourlong historical extravaganza that traced the hotel’s role. Built by the French in 1901, it served as a stand-in embassy for several countries during the Vietnam War. And because the Metropole held diplomats, combatants and bombs steered clear, making the hotel a relatively safe resting place for dignitaries and celebrities as well.

But in 1965, as the war intensified, the hotel’s managers decided to add an extra layer of protection: a five-room bunker abutting one edge of the pool. Tom told us it was used through at least the end of 1972, when Joan Baez, the American folk singer, arrived with a peace delegation that coincided with a major American attack. She ended up underground.

Her story was well known at the time. In a Rolling Stone interview with Baez afterward, she described the bombed-out city. “It was like a moonscape with all the craters,” she said.

Then the bunker seemed to disappear. As the writer Viet Than Nguyen has noted, “wars are fought twice, the first time on the battlefield, the second time in memory” — and after the American withdrawal from Vietnam in 1973, no one seemed to have much use for a warren of tiny rooms under a fancy hotel.

Except for one Aussie larrikin.

“Time for the bunker,” Tom said.

He made us put on helmets as we descended stairs near one end of the pool. The air was cool, the ceilings low. The bomb shelter had been rediscovered roughly a decade ago. Water had to be pumped out, lights restored, and there was not much to see — except on a wall to our right. Tom pointed to graffiti carved into the concrete: BOB DEVEREAUX, 17 AUG 1975.

Devereaux was an administrator for the Australian Embassy from 1975 to 1977 when it was housed in the hotel. The Australians, Tom told us, used the shelter as a wine cellar.

I looked at my wife when we heard this. Of course they did.

When the bunker was reopened, Devereaux read about it and called to apologize for his vandalism. He went back to the bunker a little later: Tom held up an iPad with the photo of an older Australian man with light hair and a printed shirt with scenes from the tropics. He was pointing at the mark he made on the wall.

“I can’t remember doing the graffiti,” he later told a reporter. “They found a couple of empty bottles in the shelter, so it could have been while I was down there, looking for a bottle of wine.”

Now for this week’s stories:


Australia and New Zealand

Eva Nargoodah at home in Jimbalakudunj, Australia, with her granddaughter. Many Aboriginal residents in a remote part of Western Australia had high hopes both of the referendum’s chances of passing and what it might accomplish.Credit…Tamati Smith for The New York Times
  • Crushing Indigenous Hopes, Australia Rejects ‘Voice’ Referendum. The proposed Indigenous Voice to Parliament was widely supported by Indigenous voters, but had raised fears and hopes that were both overblown.

  • New Zealand Elects Its Most Conservative Government in Decades. The rightward shift came as voters punished the party once led by Jacinda Ardern for failing to deliver the transformational change that it had promised.

  • Australia Fines X for Not Providing Information on Child Abuse Content. The service formerly known as Twitter told Australian regulators that its automated detection of abusive material had declined after Elon Musk bought it.


Around the Times

The Rio Negro, a tributary of the Amazon River, reached its lowest level ever recorded this week.Credit…Bruno Kelly/Reuters
  • A Severe Drought Pushes an Imperiled Amazon to the Brink. The rainforest holds a fifth of the world’s fresh water, but deforestation, dwindling rain and unrelenting heat are sucking it dry.

  • What We Know About the Hamas Attack and Israel’s Response. Hamas, the Palestinian group that controls the Gaza Strip, launched one of the broadest incursions into Israeli territory in 50 years. Israel has retaliated with immense airstrikes.

  • How to Know if You’re Iron-Deficient, and What to Do About It. Testing is fairly easy, and treatment can improve symptoms within months.


Enjoying the Australia Letter? Sign up here or forward to a friend.

For more Australia coverage and discussion, start your day with your local Morning Briefing and join us in our Facebook group.

Related Articles

Back to top button