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He Never Gave in

CPT Humbert "Rocky" Versace was a POW in Vietnam who was executed by his captors after two years in captivity for refusing to give them any information beyond what was required by the Geneva Convention. During his captivity, Versace assumed the role of senior prisoner and demanded humane treatment for himself and his fellow prisoners. He tried to escape multiple times and endured beatings and interrogations, drawing attention away from other prisoners. Local villagers witnessed Versace's strength and commitment to his beliefs even in the face of extreme hardship. He was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for his bravery and refusal to give in to his captors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views

He Never Gave in

CPT Humbert "Rocky" Versace was a POW in Vietnam who was executed by his captors after two years in captivity for refusing to give them any information beyond what was required by the Geneva Convention. During his captivity, Versace assumed the role of senior prisoner and demanded humane treatment for himself and his fellow prisoners. He tried to escape multiple times and endured beatings and interrogations, drawing attention away from other prisoners. Local villagers witnessed Versace's strength and commitment to his beliefs even in the face of extreme hardship. He was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for his bravery and refusal to give in to his captors.

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wlamiller
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CPT Humbert Rocky Versace

He Never Gave In
In a park in Alexandria, Virginia is the life size statue of an American Soldier with two small Vietnamese children. Near them is a wall with the names of 65 other Alexandrians that died during the Vietnam conflict. This memorial came almost forty years after Captain Humbert "Rocky" Versace, a POW, was executed by his captors in North Vietnam. It honors a man who never gave up his beliefs during extreme hardships and never gave in to the enemy, even in the face of death. Captain Versace was a West Point graduate assigned to the Military Assistance and Advisory Group (MAAG) as an intelligence advisor during October 1963. While accompanying a Civilian Irregular Defense Group (CIDG) engaged in combat operations in the An Xuyen Province, Versace and two fellow Special Forces Soldiers, LT Nick Rowe and SFC Dan Pitzer, were attacked by a Viet Cong main force battalion. Versace, shot in the leg and back, was taken prisoner along with the others. They were forced to walk barefoot a long distance, deep into the jungle. Once there, Versace assumed the position of senior prisoner and demanded the captors treat them as prisoners, not war criminals. They locked him in an isolation box, beaten and interrogated. He tried to escape four times, once crawling through the surrounding swamp until he was recaptured. He garnered most of the attention of the Viet Cong so that life was tolerable for his fellow prisoners. He was their role model. He refused to violate the Code of Conduct, giving the enemy only information required by the Geneva Convention which he would recite repeatedly, chapter and verse. When other Soldiers would operate in those remote areas, they heard stories of Versace's ordeal from local rice farmers. Versace spoke fluent Vietnamese and French and would resist his captors loudly enough that local villagers could hear him. They reported seeing him led through the area with a rope around his neck, hands tied, bare footed, head swollen and yellow from jaundice. His hair had turned white from the physical stress. The rice farmers spoke of his strength and character and his commitment to his God and his country. On September 26, 1965, after two years in captivity, he was executed in retaliation for three Viet Cong killed in Da Nang. For his bravery, Versace was awarded the Medal of Honor and inducted into the Ranger Hall of Fame at Ft. Benning. Versace's remains were never found, but a tombstone bearing his name stands above an empty grave in Arlington cemetery. The statue across town is a tribute to who Captain Versace was. Ironically, he was just weeks from leaving the Army and studying to become a missionary before being captured. He wanted to return to Vietnam and help the orphaned children. Most of all, he will be remembered as someone with strong character and beliefs who never gave in.

Versace with orphans in Vietnam James N. Rowe, Five Years to Freedom (New York: Ballantine Books, 1971). Website references: Website for Medal of Honor winners. Located on this website, the video, "A Soldier's Story" is a 21 minute long video outlining the life and experiences of Rocky Versace. http://www.medalofhonor.com/RockyVersace.htm http://www.somf.org/moh/versace_rocque_USA.htm http://www.washingtonian.com/people/rockyversace.html

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