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- LETTERS, Page 10Closing the Golden Door
-
- The world opened its arms to refugees after World War II.
- The problems then were finite and solvable. Today caring for
- those who leave their homelands seems never ending (WORLD, July
- 3). Concerted efforts to find solutions must be made not only
- by the Western nations but also by the "emigrant" nations. The
- population explosion in these countries is canceling out
- whatever gains are being made in industrial and food production.
-
- Helen Wilson Palo Alto, Calif.
-
- It is particularly cruel and ironic for the developed
- countries of the West to close their doors on the refugees who
- are fleeing poverty in their native lands, since their present
- predicament is partly a result of decades of economic
- exploitation by those very states.
-
- Roldo de Paula Freitas Rio de Janeiro
-
- As a former Vietnamese boat person, I know how difficult it
- is to live in a refugee camp hoping that one day you will be
- accepted by a democratic country. I totally disagree, however,
- with the statement that the Vietnamese boat people are fleeing
- troubles that are more economic than political in nature. Viet
- Nam is a Communist country where there is no freedom. A few
- million Vietnamese remain in the so-called re-education camps,
- and there is still mandatory service in the People's Army. Many
- of my friends were sent to the border of Thailand and Cambodia,
- where they died for Viet Nam's worthless cause of trying to
- maintain a firm grip on Laos and Cambodia. A free man would
- rather die of hunger than live a luxurious life with no liberty
- at all. That is why I left my homeland nine years ago.
-
- Tuan V. Hoang Chattanooga, Tenn.
-