Before I get started on the background, on a personal note, my Dad is doing better, here is a pic of him in the Hospital,
When I walked in yesterday and saw the bear, I commented "How Cute.." He shot me a bird, so I figure he is feeling better. My Dad is a Vietnam Veteran and retired from the Army as a Warrant officer with CID. He is part of the reason my brother and I also served.
Now on to my story,
I remembered when I saw this picture in my history books and I always thought well of that pic because it showed a POW returning from the hardships of the Hanoi Hilton and returning with pride to his family. Well there is a backstory to the pic I found out a day ago and finally had a bit of time to post the story. All I can say was "Damm", I felt really bad for Colonel Stirm. There are pics that are iconic for the Vietnam war and I used the following pic for an Art project in high school involving the 1960's
This pic to me represented the Vietnam war back in high school.
On March 13, 1973,
photographer Slava 'Sal' Veder captured the moment that Vietnam war
veteran and prisoner of war Lt. Col. Robert Stirm was reunited with his
family. Stirm had been imprisoned in Vietnam for nearly six years, and
this photograph came to represent not only his personal victory in
returning home, but also the path to healing
the United States needed to embark on after the Vietnam War. Yet the
real story behind this photograph, titled "Burst of Joy," is far from
the happy, joyful depiction Veder captured.
In reality, Robert Stirm's wife had written him a letter only days before his return home, telling him she was planning on divorcing him. For Stirm, this reunion was bittersweet – he was reunited with his family but returning to a wife who no longer wanted to be with him. Stirm endured all the hardships of being a prisoner of war in Vietnam only to be greeted by a wife who had admittedly cheated on him during his imprisonment and written him a letter stating her intent to divorce him – but showed up to his homecoming despite it all.
"Burst of Joy" is a poignant photograph that depicts, on the surface, the joy of a hero’s welcome. Stirm’s back is to the camera, allowing him to serve as the epitome of the resilient soldier who made his way home. This particular reunion, however, was not as joyous or welcoming as the photograph would lead you to believe. Stirm’s wife, Loretta Stirm, is seen running toward her husband, a big smile on her face. Yet only days before Stirm was rescued and brought home, Loretta wrote him a letter ending their marriage. Although the photograph may symbolize the heartwarming concept that military families could start over and heal after the Vietnam war, this was far from true for the Stirm family.
In reality, Robert Stirm's wife had written him a letter only days before his return home, telling him she was planning on divorcing him. For Stirm, this reunion was bittersweet – he was reunited with his family but returning to a wife who no longer wanted to be with him. Stirm endured all the hardships of being a prisoner of war in Vietnam only to be greeted by a wife who had admittedly cheated on him during his imprisonment and written him a letter stating her intent to divorce him – but showed up to his homecoming despite it all.
"Burst of Joy" is a poignant photograph that depicts, on the surface, the joy of a hero’s welcome. Stirm’s back is to the camera, allowing him to serve as the epitome of the resilient soldier who made his way home. This particular reunion, however, was not as joyous or welcoming as the photograph would lead you to believe. Stirm’s wife, Loretta Stirm, is seen running toward her husband, a big smile on her face. Yet only days before Stirm was rescued and brought home, Loretta wrote him a letter ending their marriage. Although the photograph may symbolize the heartwarming concept that military families could start over and heal after the Vietnam war, this was far from true for the Stirm family.
After Robert Stirm’s return, his wife of nearly 20 years managed to capitalize on their subsequent divorce. Loretta was given custody of two of their four children, the family home, and nearly half of Stirm’s pension. At the time, Stirm remarked: “It’s not fair. It’s just not. I’m the one that lives with all the aches and pains from my imprisonment, but she continues to get paid.” That certainly makes the fact that Loretta is there in the photograph, smiling wide at her then-husband, all the more painful. Even his children had trouble with his return. His daughter, Lorrie, was quoted as saying: “So much had happened—there was so much that my dad missed out on—and it took a while to let him back into our lives and accept his authority.
15-year-old Lorrie Stirm, Robert and Loretta’s eldest child, hadn’t seen her father in six years when she was captured on film running towards him with her arms flung open, ready to embrace him. Hers is the face that can truly be described as a burst of joy – she looks like she is literally bursting to hug her father.
The story behind the photograph may not be a happy one, but the photographer’s story certainly is. In 1974, Slava ‘Sal’ Veder won a Pulitzer Prize in journalism for his photograph of the Stirm family. Veder was one of many journalists present at Stirm’s return – Stirm was flown home with 20 other prisoners of war under what was called Operation Homecoming. Veder had to make a makeshift darkroom in a women’s bathroom in order to send the photograph out as quickly as possible. His quick thinking and eye for that one burst of joy won him one of the most coveted prizes for journalism in America.
To this day, Robert Stirm doesn’t like to look at "Burst of Joy." For him, it isn’t a joyous moment surreptitiously captured; it’s a bitter reminder of everything he endured and everything he lost when he came home. He refuses to hang the photograph in his home, and when asked about it, he described his feelings as “ambivalent.” As a prisoner of war, Stirm thought relentlessly about coming home to his family, and it was those thoughts that kept him alive in the face of torture. Yet his homecoming was not the happy occasion he thought about all those years, and "Burst of Joy" is a constant reminder of that pain.
Lt. Col. Robert Stirm was a US Air Force pilot, and he was shot down over Hanoi, Vietnam, in October of 1967. Notably, it turns out he was imprisoned only one day after Senator John McCain – both were held in the infamous Hoa Lo Prison. The American prisoners of war sarcastically called this prison the Hanoi Hilton. Although it is unconfirmed whether or not McCain and Stirm were acquainted, they both endured torture at this dreaded POW camp – at one point, Stirm was reported to have weighed only 100 pounds, and he spent nearly an entire year in solitary confinement. Despite his terrible experiences, Stirm continued to serve the military for four more years after his return to the United States.
Glad your dad is doing better, and Stirm wasn't the only one that happened to...
ReplyDeleteHey Old NFO:
DeleteI am glad that he is doing better, and I knew that a lot of the POW's had this happen to them and a lot of the regular GI's. Same happened to several people in my unit when I got deployed to the Gulf for DS. It is regrettable.