University of Texas at Austin, oral history project |
An Army major who rescued numerous bombing victims after a horrifying
terrorist incident in Vietnam died Tuesday (June 16, 2020) in San Antonio , Texas .
Abel Vela would have been 94 years old next week.
Although his decorated military career spanned two wars,
Vela’s most prominent heroism occurred while he was wearing civilian clothes at
the famous My Canh floating restaurant in Saigon .
Vela was waiting to meet friends before crossing the street for dinner at the
My Canh when a Viet Cong explosive blew shrapnel across the restaurant.
U.S. Joint Public Affairs Office |
As Vela evacuated casualties, a second bomb detonated, and although
injured, he continued to aid the wounded. As Vela rescued the last person—a
little girl he carried in his arms—a photographer snapped a dramatic photo that
was printed on the front page of American newspapers, including Stars and Stripes.
The shocking incident caused more than 100 casualties from
six nations, but most were Vietnamese civilians. At the time, the U.S. Joint
Public Affairs Office reported 20 Americans killed and wounded.
One year ago, Vela finally met the girl he saved, Aimee
Bartelt, a naturalized American citizen now living in New York . Aimee’s Vietnamese mother was
killed in the double bombing, along with her mother’s friend in the U.S. Army.
Vela found Aimee, who had suffered a gaping thigh wound,
underneath another body and carried her to safety. They went to the hospital in
the same vehicle. Vela told me, “I wasn’t worried because I was still alive and
walking and was more concerned about trying to help the Americans and the young
baby.”
Aimee a few years after the bombing |
The child, not quite two years old when Vela scooped her up off the restaurant floor, is
now 56. Aimee was devastated by the news of Vela’s death. "I never thought the man carrying me away in that photo would ever enter my
life again. Miraculously he did, and now he's gone again. But what a gift it
was to know him.”
Aimee had discovered me after reading my exposé about the My
Canh tragedy in Vietnam
magazine. After I located Vela in Texas ,
the two met for the first time when Aimee made a private phone call to wish
Vela a happy 93rd birthday. (Scroll back for earlier stories)
Abel Vela was born on June 26, 1926, the son of Mexican
immigrants. His father was a sharecropper and Vela and his siblings worked
alongside their parents in their cotton and corn fields, according to an oral
history interview conducted by the journalism school at the University of Texas
at Austin .
Vela as a young enlisted man. Univ. of Texas-Austin |
During his first enlistment in World War II, Vela helped
liberate Jewish prisoners from concentration camps. After the war, he met his
wife, Angela, in Austria .
When Vela’s Vietnam
service ended in 1970, the couple returned to San Antonio where Abel was the first Latino
to own a McDonald’s franchise. This time he had to fight prejudice. “They
didn’t want any Hispanics or blacks,” he told oral history interviewer Nora
Frost in 2008. “I went over to [McDonald’s] headquarters and took my cot with
me and slept there, until I was able to get an interview.” The Velas eventually
operated five Mc Donald’s.
Fifty-five years after Abel and Aimee were brought together
at the chaotic bombing scene, Aimee has lost her hero. “Now, Abel Vela is not
just some stranger in a photo anymore, but a remarkable man who led a
remarkable life and left behind a lot of people who loved and admired him. I'm
so thankful to be one of these.”
Abel Vela is survived by his wife Angela and an extended family
that spans five generations.
An internet photo showing the moment Vela picked up Aimee |