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UNITED STATES

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In the city of Boston, the seaport area of ​​Massachusetts state, after reading and pondering the Declaration of Independence, 1776, which was mostly authored by Thomas Jefferson - the third President of the United States, the Vietnamese young man on the journey to find a way to save the country was tremendously motivated. In the opening words of the 1945 Declaration of Independence, He quoted the key points and basic premise of the American Declaration of Independence: “All men are created equal; they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights; among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.” The already blazing fire of resolve and the will to restore Vietnam's unity and national integrity blazed even brighter from this point on.

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Some documents claimed that Nguyễn Ái Quốc made multiple trips to Potomac, a famous river in the United States that flows through Washington and into the Atlantic Ocean, years ago. Later, that same river inscribed the enduring example of Norman Morrison, the man who valiantly set himself on fire in front of the Pentagon to oppose the Vietnam War. He is also the eternal symbol of peace in the poem ‘Emily, my child’ written by the poet To Huu that the nation's subsequent generations are familiar with

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There is surprising fact that upon seeing the enormous Statue of Liberty, a gift from the French people to the American people in honor of their fight for independence, He wrote down his thoughts about the depressing reality that this admirable ideal has been and continues to be violated. He wrote: “The light omitted from the head of the statue of Liberty shines out, lighting up the blue sky, but at the foot of the Statue of Liberty, the rights of black people and women were being trampled on. When will the blacks be equal to the whites? When will there be equality among nations? And when will women be equal to men?” This evokes boundless emotion inside every Viet when we know that even though Nguyễn Tất Thành was a young man and was conscious of the injustice and oppression that present in every community, He still  yearned for freedom and peace for his country.

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