Last modified: 2015-12-27 by ian macdonald
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image by Željko Heimer and Phil Nelson
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The Viet Quoc, or Viet Nam Quoc Dan Dang was established on December 25, 1927. Its primary objectives included armed uprising aimed at toppling the French colonialist regime all over Vietnam to gain independence for its Fatherland and democracy as well as happiness for its people.
On February 10, 1930, the Viet Quoc were involved in a general uprising in Ha Noi (Hanoi). The attacks were unsuccessful and the leaders were sentenced to death by the French government.
Along with the communist party, the Viet Quoc was a member of the Vietnamese Revolutionary Allied League (Viet Nam Cach Menh Dong Minh Hoi, or VNCMDMH). The communists, led by Ho Chi Minh took control of the government, expelling non-communist parties from the VNCKMDMH and executing members of the political opposition.
Taking refuge in South Vietnam, the Viet Quoc joined the armed forces of South Vietnam from 1954-1975. The party is presently in exile.
The Viet Quoc was strongly patterned after the Chinese Kuomintang. During the 1930s
they received funding from the KMT as well as the Vietnam
Hotel in Hanoi which the party owned. As the organization was
devoted to the independence of Vietnam, the hotel provided a
means for French agents to acquire information about the
party activities.
Phil Nelson, 2 September 2003
image by Tomislav Todorovic, 28 November 2015
Original party flag was adopted in May 1929, at the party convention which
was making the plans for armed uprising against French colonial rule. It
was a horizontal bicolor, with yellow at the bottom symbolizing the
Vietnamese people and red at the top symbolizing their struggle for
independence. The flag was raised on 1930-02-10 in Yen Bai city, where
Vietnamese soldiers in the French colonial army, supported by the Viet
Quoc, tried to raise the uprising, but were suppressed during the same day
by the rest of the garrison. It was also used in several succeeding
incidents which took place until 1930-02-16. The party kept the flag in
use until June 1945, when the current design was adopted jointly with the
Dai Viet Nationalist Party as the flag of the
National United Front (Mat Tran Quoc Gia Lien Hiep), which operated as the
single party in the Communist-controlled areas under the name of
Nationalist Party Front of Vietnam (Mat Tran Quoc Dan Dang Viet Nam).
Although the Viet Quoc did not return to its original flag after the
alliance was dissolved, it is still used on special occasions, as was done
in January 2010 in French Guiana, where a memorial was constructed to the
insurgents of 1930 who were imprisoned and died there. It shall be noted
that a number of websites and other sources depict the flag as a
red-yellow diagonal flag, but the party website shows images, including
the photos, of a horizontal bicolor only.
Sources:
[1] Wikipedia
page about the Viet Quoc party (in English):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vi%E1%BB%87t_Nam_Qu%E1%BB%91c_D%C3%A2n_%C4%90%E1%BA%A3ng
[2] Wikipedia page about the Viet Quoc party (in Vietnamese):
https://vi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vi%E1%BB%87t_Nam_Qu%E1%BB%91c_d%C3%A2n_%C4%90%E1%BA%A3ng
[3] Viet Quoc party website - Party history - Page 7 (in Vietnamese):
http://vietquoc.org/lich-su-dau-tranh-can-dai-viet-nam-quoc-dan-dang-7/
[4] Viet Quoc party website - The 2010 commemoration in French Guiana
- Page 5 (in Vietnamese):
http://vietquoc.org/d%E1%BB%B1ng-bia-t%C6%B0%E1%BB%9Fng-ni%E1%BB%87m-li%E1%BB%87t-si-vnqdd-t%E1%BA%A1i-guyane-nam-m%E1%BB%B9-5/
[5] Van Dao Hoang (author) and Khue Huynh (translator): Viet Nam Quoc Dan
Dang: A Contemporary History of a National Struggle: 1927-1954 Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania: RoseDog Books, 2008 ISBN 978-1-4349-9136-2
(Avaliable at
Google Books:
https://books.google.com.vn/books?id=ANNaSrzrN64C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false)
Tomislav Todorovic, 28 November 2015