




On my last morning in Ha Noi, I took a tour of the Hanoi Hilton and tracked down the lake where an American B-52 went down. It was a John McCain-themed morning.
Only a third of the original Hoa Lo Prison (aka Hanoi Hilton) remains in tact. The rest of the site was torn down and became high-rise office towers. Regardless, the 1/3 that's left has enough creepiness to stand on its own. Built by the French to house and torture Vietnamese, most of the prison honors the country's struggle for independence against the French. The prison still has the original guillotine, with pictures of heads on the walls. The site is most famous in the U.S. for housing POWs, particularly McCain, whose parachute and gear are on display.
Next up, I decided to track down an American B-52 shot down in 1972, a chunk of which is still in tact and emerges from Hun Tiep Lake. It looked easy to find on the map, but as it turns out, it was anything but. It's off of the main streets and I had to walk in the narrow lanes of a city neighborhood in search of this lake; lanes so narrow that no cars are allowed. Kind of glad I got lost; otherwise, I would have never had the chance to see where the locals live. After walking down many of these lanes and having many kids scream "Hello" to me, I turned a corner and there was the lake (more like a pond) with a piece of the plane in clear view.
Surprisingly, if I had to name the most impactful sight of Ha Noi, it was this. An incredible piece of history surrounded by ordinary day-to-day life. There's a small veggie/fruit stand on one side, a primary school on another, and row houses all around. I could tell this wasn't a main attraction for tourists; I was the only foreigner there. I couldn't help but hang out and stare at it...