VIETTI, ELEANOR
ARDEL
| Name: |
.Eleanor Ardel
Vietti |
 |
| Rank/Branch: |
Civilian -
Surgeon |
|
| Unit: |
Christian
&
Missionary Alliance |
|
| Date of Birth: |
05 November 1927
(Ft. Worth,
TX) |
|
| Home of Record: |
Houston, TX |
|
| Date of Loss: |
30 May 1962 |
|
| Country of Loss: |
South Vietnam |
|
| Loss
Coordinates: |
123250N
1075927E (ZU250888)
Click
coordinates to view maps |
|
| Status in 1973: |
Prisoner of
War |
|
| Category: |
1 |
|
| Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: |
Ground |
|
| Other
Personnel
in Incident: |
Rev.
Archie
E. Mitchell and Daniel A. Gerber (both captured) |
|
REMARKS: TAKEN
FROM
LEPROSARIUM
SYNOPSIS:On November 5,
1927, Eleanor Ardel Vietti was born a twin in Ft. Worth, Texas.
Her father was a physical chemist who provided Ardel, her twin sister
and brother with a comfortable childhood. He also provided his
family the experience of living in South America for several
years. Ardel, as she preferred to be called, attended both Rice
Institute with her sister for their undergraduate studies. She
went on to Nyack Missionary College one summer, and then attended
medical school at the University of Texas, Galveston. Following
her residency, she applied for Foreign Service with Christian and
Missionary Alliance, and after being accepted, she was certified for
appointment to their Ban Me Thuot Leprosarium in South Vietnam in 1957.
The Christian and Missionary Alliance first arrived in South Vietnam in
1911. By the end of the Vietnam War there were over 138
missionaries throughout the country. Three weeks before Saigon
fell, the church began moving its personnel out of the country.
The last missionary to leave South Vietnam left on the next to last
helicopter that lifted off the roof of the American Embassy on 29 April
1975.
In 1961, Ardel Vietti visited her sister who had recently joined the
Washington University School of Medicine as an assistant professor of
pediatrics in the hope of learning surgical procedures that would
benefit her leprosy patients in Vietnam. When interviewed in
2002, Dr. Teresa Vietti recalled her sister’s trip, “I remember her
visiting me at the hospital and saying, ‘You spend more money in one
day on one patient than I do in my whole hospital.’”
The Leprosarium
ministered to anyone needing medical assistance regardless of race,
religion or political persuasion. At any time the hospital was
capable of treating 120 inpatients and 1,200 outpatients. It was
located in the dense jungle of Darlac Province, South Vietnam; 9 miles
southwest of the provincial capitol of Ban Me Thuot, 5 miles
south-southeast of Xa Tho Thanh and 25 miles east of the South
Vietnamese/Lao border.
The
Christian and Missionary Alliance, the Mennonite Central Committee
and American Leprosy Missions, Inc. jointly financed this medical
facility. In all, there were 56 Alliance church groups working in
the areas surrounding Ban Me Thuot during 1962. In addition to
the staff of nine - which included Rev. Archie Mitchell, the
administrative officer, Dr. Ardel Vietti, the hospital’s surgeon and
Daniel A. Gerber who were captured at the same time - Archie Mitchell's
wife, Bette, and their 4 children lived at the compound.
On
Wednesday, 30 May 1962 at 1945 hours, a group of 12 armed Viet Cong
(CV) guerrillas entered the Leprosarium compound. Dividing into 3
groups, the VC accosted Dan Gerber, tied him up and led him to a
holding area outside the compound. Another group went directly to
the house of Rev. Mitchell where they promptly ordered him out of his
home. The communists immediately tied his arms behind him before
leading him away to join Mr. Gerber. The last group crossed over
to Dr. Vietti’s home, ordered her outside and escorted her to the
holding area.
The VC also quickly rounded up the rest of the staff and sternly
lectured them on their betrayal of the Vietnamese people.
Further, they assured the staff that each of them deserved an immediate
and painful death. While the Communists terrorized the nurses and
other missionaries, including the children, the VC did not harm or
molest them. After completing their lecture, the VC ransacked all
the buildings for anything they could use - linens, medicines, clothing
and surgical instruments - then packed the supplies into the hospital’s
truck.
Originally the VC planned to take Betty Mitchell and the couple’s
children along with the other three. After convincing the VC that
the missionaries’ would fully cooperate with them if only they would
leave Mrs. Mitchell and the children behind, the VC forced Dr. Vietti,
Rev. Mitchell and Mr. Gerber into the back of the truck under armed
guard. At roughly 2200 hours, the communists departed the
hospital compound with their prisoners and supplies. At the time
US intelligence believed the three were abducted for use in a VC
hospital.
When Ardel Vietti, Archie Mitchell and Dan Gerber were captured, the US
pledged all of its resources in order to see that everything possible
was done to achieve their safe rescue or release. Both American and
South Vietnamese military intelligence agencies immediately discovered
their probable detention location. Likewise, they also confirmed
that communist forces used these medical personnel’s expertise to treat
their own sick and wounded as they moved from one location to
another. Unfortunately, while our intelligence successfully
tracked Dr. Vietti, Rev. Mitchell and Mr. Gerber’s movements, they were
never able to mount a rescue mission due the heavy and continuous enemy
presence in and around the area of captivity.
At the same time the military was actively tracking Ardel Vietti,
Archie Mitchell and Dan Gerber; missionary officials were attempting to
negotiate for their release. By 1969, negotiations between the
Christian and Missionary Alliance and some North Vietnamese soldiers
seemed close to gaining the missionaries’ release. However, the
negotiations collapsed and never could be reconstituted.
Throughout the years there have been a continuous flow of reports and
sightings of these civilian missionaries, as well as American military
personnel, under the control of VC and NVA cadre during and after the
war. In fact, since the end of the Vietnam War there have been
well over 21,000 reports of American prisoners, missing and otherwise
unaccounted for received by our government. Many of these reports
document LIVE America Prisoners of War remaining captive throughout
Southeast Asia TODAY.
Missionaries, like military personnel, were called upon to operate in
many dangerous circumstances, and they were prepared to lay down their
lives or be captured, if necessary, in order to carry out their
humanitarian work. It probably never occurred to them that they
could be abandoned in the same manner as American military men by their
country.