The photograph which is the inspiration for the Uplift
International logo, showing children standing on the open hands
,
was taken in 1974. The young girl in orange
and black and the little boy next to her on the hand toward the right
side of the picture are two of the artist's children. The other children
are friends and relatives.
The hands were designed and created by Dr. Luu Nguyen Dat on
the grounds of his home in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). This was part of a series
of hands built of concrete and cast in place. Some were designed as seating for adults
while the two hands shown here are more monumental and also intended for the children.
The artist, Dr. Luu, was a lawyer in Vietnam. When he and
his family fled their home in 1975, they arrived at Camp Pendleton Marine Base near
Oceanside California where a refugee camp had been hastily set up. During their stay at
the camp, two important events of creation and renewal occurred: Mrs. Luu gave birth to
the couples' youngest child, who was named "David" (after the Pendleton base
Chaplan) and "Viet" (after the country they left behind); and Dr. Luu created
his American version of the Hands of Hope. Those hands can be viewed to this day at an
entrance to the marine base.
The two children in the photo are now adults and each is
making a contribution that is connected to their refugee experience. The girl, Hue-Chan
Luu, founded VietLink in 1992, which provides training and education resources for the
country of her childhood. VietLink was instrumental in organizing and funding the first
trade mission to the United States to be given "official" status by the
Vietnamese government. This trade mission was led by Minister Thai Phung Ne, who was then
Minister of Energy, and presented conferences to large audiences in Atlanta Georgia and
San Francisco. Today Ms. Luu is a director of KHM, Inc. which provides infrastructure
development consulting and project management services for U.S. companies operating in
Vietnam. The primary emphasis is on power projects and industrial development.
The young boy is Ky Luu. His contribution took a different
path when he was sent to Bosnia by the International Rescue Committee (IRC), with the task
of assisting resettlement of Bosnian Muslim refugees. He had the painful job of
interviewing those whose asylum application was denied and drafting their appeals. Later
he worked on relief efforts for the Newly Independent States and became a director at
IRIS. His latest move takes him to the New York office of the law firm of White &
Case.
In 1993, Hue-Chan returned to Vietnam for the first time
when VietLink arranged for Gary P. Hauptman and John K Spencer to present a lecture series
entitled "U.S. Business Law and Practices" for more than 100 Vietnamese
professionals at the Foreign Trade Development Center of HCMC.
While in Ho Chi Minh City, Hue-Chan visited her childhood
home. What she found was poignant and heartwarming. The house had been turned into a
primary school. All of the smaller hands were gone and a second building of class rooms
was in their place. But the hands in this photo are still standing and in perfect
condition. Today, 25 years after the Luu family left, children still clamber into the
upraised palms and strong fingers of the Hands of Hope.
