The Washington Post - 14.11.2019

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B6 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14 , 2019


obituaries


nationalist.”
Tri Quang — the name meant
“brilliant mind,” according to
Time — was born in Diem Dien, a
village in the central province of
Quang Binh that would later
become part of the Communist
North. According to an obituary
published by Voice of America,
which reported his birth date as
Dec. 21, 1923, his name at birth
was Pham Quang.
He was the son of a farmer and
became a monk at age 12 or 13, a
practice that Miller said was not
unusual in Vietnam. He settled
in Hue, which after 1954 became
part of South Vietnam. Time
reported that his pagoda ex-
pelled him over his penchant for
practical jokes but later readmit-
ted him.
Early on, Tri Quang was in-
spired by the struggle against the
French colonial rule that ended
with the conclusion of the first
Indochina war in 1954 and the
division of Vietnam at the 17th
parallel. He was also concerned,
Miller wrote in an article pub-
lished in 2014 in the journal
Modern Asian Studies, with what
Tri Quang described as the “unity
of the Buddhist faithful” across
Vietnam.
He first came to prominence
in 1963 as a leader of protests
that led to the ouster of Diem, the
first president of South Vietnam,

in a U.S.-backed coup that No-
vember. Diem was Catholic, with
a brother who was a powerful
archbishop, and most of the
protesters seeking his overthrow
were Buddhist. For them and for
Tri Quang, Miller said, Bud-
dhism and Vietnamese national
identity went “hand in hand.”
Time reported that Tri Quang
employed spies in the Diem gov-
ernment and armed monks with
insecticide sprayers filled with
vinegar and red pepper. Hostili-
ties reached a flash point on
May 8, 1963, when South Viet-
namese soldiers fired on a group
of Buddhists flying a Buddhist
flag in Hue. Nine people were
killed.
Protests culminated with the
ritual suicide on June 11, 1963, of
the Buddhist monk Thich Quang
Duc, who was soaked with gaso-
line and then sat lotus style as he
burned to death on a Saigon
street.
That scene, captured in a pho-
tograph by Associated Press jour-
nalist Malcolm Browne, rico-
cheted around the world and
pushed President John F. Kenne-
dy to reconsider U.S. support for
Diem, who was ultimately assas-
sinated in the coup.
After Diem’s death, to the
chagrin of U.S. officials who
wished to see a more stable
South Vietnam amid the ongoing

BY EMILY LANGER


Thich Tri Quang, a Buddhist
monk who wielded formidable
political power during the Viet-
nam War, leading waves of pro-
tests that brought down South
Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh
Diem in 1963 and later contribut-
ed to growing American ambiva-
lence about the war, died Nov. 8
in Hue. He was 95.
His death was announced by
the Tu Dam Temple in that
central Vietnamese city, where
he lived. The cause was not
immediately available.
For about three years during a
critical phase of the Vietnam
War, from 1963 to 1966, Tri
Quang commanded headlines as
a figure of international interest
if not outright intrigue. More
than once, the New York Times
featured him as a “Man in the
News.” Clad in gray robes, he
appeared on the front of Time
magazine in 1966.
“Lean, well-muscled, with a
sensual electricity, in every ges-
ture and blazing eyes that can
mesmerize a mob, Thich Tri
Quang, 42, has long been South
Viet Nam’s mysterious High
Priest of Disorder,” read the cov-
er story in Time.
“Wily and ruthless, Delphic
and adept, he is the best of breed
of a new kind of back room
bonze,” the profile continued,
using another word for Buddhist
monk. “In the murky world of
Oriental mysticism and Saigon’s
immemorial intrigue, these
robed and shaven men have
emerged as the new Machiavellis
of the Vietnamese political
scene. Tri Quang is unquestion-
ably their prince.”
Part of the fascination sur-
rounding Tri Quang — Thich is a
religious title, akin to “the Rever-
end” in English — stemmed from
what to Western observers some-
times seemed the contradictory
nature of his objectives. He was
variously described as the great
champion of Vietnam’s Buddhist
majority and a radical sowing
political dissent in an already
tortured land. At times, he was
called a communist, at other
times an anti-communist.
In 1963, he was granted a
haven in the U.S. Embassy in
South Vietnam after escaping
government raids on Buddhist
pagodas. But by 1966, he charged
that Vietnam was “oppressed by
two pressures — the Communists
and the Americans.”
“When it comes to the Viet-
nam War,” Edward Miller, a pro-
fessor of history at Dartmouth
College, said in an interview, “I
think that Americans and others
always tend to try to fit every-
thing that happened... into this
Cold War framework, where it’s
all about communism or anti-
communism. In the case of Tri
Quang, I think the key to under-
standing him is that he was first
and foremost a Buddhist and a


war with the North, Tri Quang
mobilized his followers to help
overthrow a succession of gov-
ernments and their holdovers
from the Diem regime.
At that point, Miller said, the
U.S. government began to look
on him more skeptically.
“We perceived that he had
great influence over Buddhist
opinion within South Vietnam,”
said James McAllister, a scholar
of the Vietnam War at Williams
College in Williamstown, Mass.,
and hoped he would “rally South
Vietnam to fight against commu-
nism.”
Instead what ensued was con-
tinued dissension across South
Vietnam. A second Buddhist up-
rising, again with Tri Quang as a
principal leader, erupted in 1966
during the government of Nguy-
en Cao Ky, revealing the extent of
fissures within the South Viet-
namese society and government.
The protests, which were
eventually crushed, came as an
unwelcome development in the
United States, which by then had
deepened its involvement in war
with the deployment of combat
troops. The question that arose,
said McAllister, was “how are we
going to win this war if... the
people of South Vietnam are
fighting each other?”
Around that time, Tri Quang
mounted a hunger strike that
brought his weight to 84 pounds,
The Washington Post reported in


  1. Even in the heat of Viet-
    nam he wore a wool sweater.
    “I have no flesh left to keep in
    the warmth,” Tri Quang told a
    Post reporter. “There is nothing
    to me anymore.”
    Allegations of Tri Quang’s sup-
    posed communism swirled long
    after he left the public eye, as
    scholars reexamined the history
    of the Vietnam War. But a CIA
    investigation of Tri Quang in
    1964, cited by Miller in his 2014
    article, described those charges
    as founded on “hearsay, gossip
    and accusations without any
    supporting evidence.”
    Little was known about Tri
    Quang’s activities after the end
    of the Vietnam War. It was said
    that he spent a period under
    house arrest at his pagoda, but
    that information could not be
    confirmed. He had a brother who
    served in the South Vietnamese
    army and another who also was a
    monk, but complete information
    on his survivors was not immedi-
    ately available.
    In its 1966 cover story, Time
    reported that Tri Quang lived for
    at least one period in a small cell
    at his pagoda, where he did not
    partake of meat, cigarettes or
    alcohol. He rose with the sun, a
    reporter wrote, “spending a third
    of his waking day in prayer, a
    third in activity, a third in con-
    templation of his mistakes.”
    [email protected]


Paul Mooney in Hanoi contributed to
this report.

THICH TRI QUANG, 95


High-profile figure during Vietnam War


CHARLES BONNAY/LIFE IMAGES COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES
Thich Tri Quang enters a news conference held by Buddhist leaders
in 1966. During the Vietnam War, the monk commanded headlines
as a person of international interest if not outright intrigue.

BY SAMUEL PETREQUIN


Raymond Poulidor, the “eter-
nal runner-up” whose repeated
failure to win the Tour de France
helped him conquer French
hearts and become the country’s
all-time favorite cyclist, died Nov.
13 in Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat, in
central France. He was 83.
Town officials confirmed the
death but did not provide a
cause. He had been hospitalized
last month after a bout of fatigue
this summer during the Tour,
where he worked every year as an
ambassador for the yellow jer-
sey’s sponsor.
Decades after his career end-
ed, Mr. Poulidor was still adored
in a nation where sports fans love
to pull for “magnificent losers.”
The fact he never wore the yellow
jersey — and never quite got the
better of rivals Jacques Anquetil
and Eddy Merckx — became his
trademark.
Outside of cycling’s circles, his
status as a nearly man eclipsed
the achievements of Anquetil
and Bernard Hinault, the two
French members of the elite club
of five-time Tour winners.
“His feats, his panache, his
courage will forever remain en-
graved in our memories,” French
President Emmanuel Macron
said. “Poupou, forever the yellow
jersey in French hearts.”
Over his 17-year-career, Mr.
Poulidor — nicknamed “Poupou”
— secured a record eight podium


finishes at the Tour de France,
cycling’s showpiece event, but
could never reach Paris in the
famed yellow tunic worn by the
race leader after each stage.
Ironically, considering he nev-
er got to wear it during his racing
career, he wore a yellow shirt
every day as an ambassador for
the grueling race.
The son of sharecroppers, Mr.
Poulidor was born in Masbaraud-
Merignat, France, on April 15,
1936.
He turned professional in 1960
and took part in 14 Tours from
1962 to 1976. He finished in

second place three times and was
third five times.
He achieved much success
with the French Mercier team
before he retired in 1977, a year
after he finished third in his final
Tour de France behind Lucien
Van Impe and Joop Zoetemelk at
the age of 40.
His career came during an era
of greatness in cycling and
wedged him between two superb-
ly strong riders in Anquetil and
Merckx.
Despite just falling short at the
Tour, Mr. Poulidor was more than
merely a second fiddle. He was an

all-rounder graced by great
climbing skills and posted presti-
gious wins at the Milan-San
Remo and Walloon Arrow clas-
sics, the Spanish Vuelta — his
only Grand Tour win — and the
Paris-Nice stage race.
In 1962, he made his Tour
debut with a broken finger and
put on a great show in the Alps to
win a daunting stage featuring
five climbs with a commanding
three-minute lead.
Two years later, Mr. Poulidor
started the 1964 Tour as favorite,
having won the Vuelta earlier
that year. After dropping An-
quetil during a Pyrenean stage,
he reached the top of the Port
d’Envalira climb with a three-
minute lead over his cycling
nemesis. But Anquetil rode at
breakneck speed in the descent
to catch up with his rival, before
Mr. Poulidor hit the tarmac in the
fog and eventually lost two min-
utes.
At the 1968 Tour, he was in-
volved in a serious crash after a
motorbike knocked him over and
fell on top of him.
“When I was hit by the motor-
bike, I was almost dead on the
side of the road,” Mr. Poulidor
told the Associated Press four
years ago, recalling the incident.
Despite all the hard luck, he
wasn’t bitter.
“I was unlucky, but the bike
brought me more than it cost
me,” he once said.
— Associated Press

RAYMOND POULIDOR, 83


Cyclist was ‘eternal runner-up’ at Tour de France


AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
Raymond Poulidor arrives at the 20th stage of the Tour de France
in 1976. Mr. Poulidor, a French favorite, finished the Tour in
second place three times and was third five times — but never first.

IN MEMORIAM


CHARLES FREED
November 19, 1935- November 14, 2017
It’s been two years,We love you and miss you.
Marlene, Sharon, Cory, Nancy,Keith
Joshua, Nathan, Sarah, Maddie and Sam

FREED


MARY J. HAILE
May 4, 1921 - November 14, 2006
We will Always Love and Miss You.
Sons, Sterling and Jackie Johnson & Family

HAILE


REV. DR. OSWALD G. SMITH
In loving memory of our devoted father.
Your presence we miss.
Your memory we treasure.
Loving you always, forgetting you never.
Son, Gary and Daughter,Alicia

SMITH


DEATH NOTICE


VIOLA J. BONHAM
(Age 95)
On November 9, 2019.
Friends may visit with the
family on Friday, November
15, viewing 10 a.m. until
time of service 11 a.m. at St.
Marks Baptist Church, 624
Underwood St NW, Washing-
ton, DC. Interment Ft. Lincoln Cemetery.

BONHAM


SGM. ISAAC BROWN, USA (Ret.)
"Big Daddy"
On Wednesday, October 16, 2019 Isaac
entered into eternal rest at Charlotte Hall
Veterans Home. Survived by his loving wife,
Maudis Brown; daughters, Debra and Cheryl;
grandchildren, Hope, Moncia, and Nickolas.
great-grandsons, Ty and Isaiah. He was pre-
ceded in death by his two sons, Isaac, Jr., and
Gregory. A viewing will be held on Friday,
November 15, 2019 from 10 a.m. until time
of service at 11 a.m. at Macedonia Baptist
Church, 3412 South 22nd St., Arlington, VA.
Interment at Arlington National Cemetery at a
later date.
http://www.kalasfuneralhomes.com

BROWN


CARL USHER BURBANK, JR.
On November 12, 2019, CARL USHER BUR-
BANK, JR., beloved husband of Shirley Ann
Burbank; devoted father of Patricia Burbank,
Elena Staggers (Reggie), Victor Burbank (Dee),
David Burbank (Marlene) and step-father of Will
Watson (Milande) and Vanessa Ford (Michael);
loving grandfather of 13 grandchildren; dear
brother of Judi Phillips and Gail Lattime. Also
survived by many loving family and friends.The
family will be having an inurnment on Friday
at 10:45 a.m. at Garrison Forest Veteran’s
Cemetery in Owings Mills, MD. Following that
the family will be having a Memorial Service
at 12:30 p.m. at Glen Mar United Methodist
Church, 4701 New Cut Road Ellicott City, MD


  1. In lieu of flowers, donations may be
    made to Glen Mar United Methodist Church.
    Online condolences may be made at
    http://www.harrywitzkefuneralhome.com


BURBANK


KATHERINE M. CIOFFI (Age 69)
On Monday, November 11, 2019,
of Fayetteville, PA, formerly of Sil-
ver Spring, MD. Beloved wife of
Charles "Tony" Cioffi; mother of
Anthony and Nicholas (Liz); grand-
mother of Matthew and Cole; sis-
ter of John, Bernard, Peter and the
late Mary Ann. Relatives and friends may call at
Collins Funeral Home,500 University Boulevard
West, Silver Spring, MD (Valet Parking) Sunday,
November 17, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Mass
of Christian Burial at St. John the Evangelist
Church, 10103 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring,
MD, on Monday, November 18, at 11 a.m.
Interment private.
http://www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com

CIOFFI


they resided for 46 years together until her
death in 2008.
Lawrence was meticulous and detailed in all
his activities, both professionally and person-
ally. He mastered French and Russian, early
in his career, to be able to read professional
physics and mathematical documents. After
he married Ursula, he also became fluent in
German. Together they traveled extensively
throughout Europe, (especially visiting family
in Germany and Austria) as it meant so much
to Ursula.
Until his late 80’s, Dr Schmid continued to do
research to facilitate power generation using
Nuclear Fusion.
Dr. Schmid’s passion for education (especially
in the Physics Discipline) led him to establish
a scholarship/mentoring program at Univer-
sity of Maryland to provide jobs for juniors
and seniors in the Physics program to tutor
incoming freshmen. He believed this men-
toring activity would provide all these stu-
dents a better understanding of the discipline
while keeping them fully engaged in study
of physics. His legacy will also establish
the same type of programs at Penn and
Princeton.
Lawrence was preceded in death by his
loving wife of 46 years, Ursula (Hollwig) Sch-
mid, his two sisters, Edith Beck and Marjorie
Schmid, and his brother, Alan Schmid, and
a niece and a nephew. His is survived by
11 nieces and nephews, whom his influence,
wonderful sense of humor, and limitless
wealth of information, has been a lifelong
experience. Many of his grand nieces and
nephews have also had the experience of
knowing their “Uncle Lawrence”. He will be
dearly missed by all.
A memorial service will be held January 11,
2020 at 11 a.m. at the, located Borgwardt
Funeral Home at 4400 Powder Mill Rd.,
Beltsville, MD. A luncheon will follow the
service.

DR. LAWRENCE A. SCHMID
A Doctor of Theoretical Physics, of Greenbelt,
MD, passed away peacefully, on November
4, 2019 at the age of 91. Lawrence was
born in Philadelphia, PA to Walter and Mil-
dred (Lawrence) Schmid and was the third
of four children. Dr. Schmid graduated from
the University of Pennsylvania, and went on
to earn his Doctorate at Princeton Universi-
ty. Lawrence taught at Michigan State for a
short time before joining NASA at Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt. Dr. Schmid,
due to his contribution to the Apollo Lunar
Landing in 1969, was awarded a citation of
recognition by the Goddard Center Director.
He was also involved with many other Space
Flight missions.
During his time at NASA, Lawrence (Larry
to many of his friends and some family
members) met and married Ursula, the love
of his life. She was originally from Berlin,
Germany.They settled in Greenbelt where

SCHMID


DEATH NOTICE


HUGH H. CLOWER, SR. "Butch"
Prince George’s County Profes-
sional Fire Fighters & Paramedics
Association, IAFF Local 1619,
regretfully announces the passing
of Retired Brother Hugh H. Clower,
Sr. on November 9, 2019.
Andrew K. Pantelis, President

CLOWER


SHIRLEY COHEN
On Monday, November 11,
2019, SHIRLEYCOHEN of
Springfield, VA. Beloved wife of
the late Morton Cohen. Loving
mother of Dr. Howard Cohen
(Dr. Lucy Civitello) and Lori
Cohen (Woody Wheeler). Dear sister to
Rochelle (the late Jay) Novins, the late
Joseph (the late Sylvia) Pechman and the
late Dorothy (the late Jim) Rice. Cherished
grandmother of Leah (Ben) Elstrott, Audrey
Wheeler, Michelle and Lisa Cohen. Funeral
services will be held on Friday, November
15, 2019, 10:30 a.m. at Beth El Hebrew
Congregation, 3830 Seminary Rd., Alexan-
dria VA 22304. Interment following at King
David Memorial Garden, Falls Church, VA.
Shiva will be announced. Memorial contri-
butions maybe made to Alive! http://www.alive-
inc.org/donations, League of Women Vot-
ers, http://www.lwv.org or Beth El Hebrew Con-
gregation. Arrangements entrusted to
TORCHINSKY HEBREW FUNERAL HOME,
202-541-1001

COHEN


ELEANOR MARY COLE
Eleanor "Jakie" Cole of Silver Spring,
MD on Thursday, November 6, 2019.
Beloved sister of Annette Helman
and Sue Judson, and the late Frank
and Robert Cole. Survived by many
loving nieces and nephews as well
as devoted friends.Mass of Christian
Burial will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday, November
23, 2019 at Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church,
15661 Norbeck Boulevard (LeisureWorld) Silver
Spring, MD 20906 with a reception to follow at
Clubhouse one. Interment at Gate of Heaven
will be at a later date. Memorial contributions
may be made to https://www.catholicchari-
tiesdc.org/ Arrangements by Cole Funeral Ser-
vices, Rockville, MD.
http://www.colefuneral.com

COLE


MARGARET MARY FORD
On November 11, 2019, Margaret “Peggy”
Mary Ford died peacefully at Stella Maris
HospiceinTimonium,MD,attheageof65.
Peggy was preceded in death by her parents,
Francis J. Nolan and Sarah (Sally) M. Nolan.
She is survived by her husband of 41 years,
J. Patrick Ford of Columbia, Md; her sons,
Brendan Patrick Ford and Kevin Michael Ford;
brothers Patrick (Beth) Nolan of Salisbury, Md;
James (Karen) Nolan of Annandale, Va; and
Joseph (Sue) Nolan of Pittsburgh, Pa.; loving
brothers- and sisters-in-law, nieces, nephews,
godchildren, and life-long friends.
The family will receive friends at HARRY H.
WITZKE’S FAMILY FUNERAL HOME, 4112 Old
Columbia Pike, Ellicott City, MD on Friday, Nov.
15, 7 to 9 p.m. A Funeral Mass will be said
on Saturday, November 16, 10 a.m. at St. Louis
Catholic Church, Clarksville, MD. Interment is
private. In lieu of flowers, donations may be
made to Calvert Hall College High School, St.
Louis School or the Sisters of Providence of St.
Mary of the Woods. A full obituary may be
found at http://www.harrywitzkefuneralhome.com.

FORD


JANE WATMAN GIVENS
Jane Watman Givens, 82 of Frederick, MD,
formerly of Silver Spring, MD, died Saturday
evening, November 9, 2019 at Frederick
Memorial Hospital, surrounded by her family.
Surviving are her husband Robert Givens, her
five children, Anthony Givens, Michael Givens,
MaryAngela Erdle, Bonnie Sammons, Alex
Givens; 14 grandchildren and four great-grand-
children. A Mass of Christian Burial will be
held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, November 16, 2019
at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, 47 Depaul
Street, Emmitsburg, MD.The family will receive
friends from 12:15 to 1 p.m. at the church.
Private interment. Expressions of sympathy
and the full obituary may be shared at:
http://www.staufferfuneralhome.com

GIVENS


MICHAEL FRANCIS GOETZINGER
On November 10, 2019 of Fairfax, VA. Beloved
husband of 51 years of Connie Burnley; father
of William Burnley (Barbara), Beverly Akahavan
(Rockie) and James Burnley; brother of Mary
Noel Mason (Steven); grandfather of Allison,
William, Joshua, Juliana and Andrew; uncle
of Stephanie, Jennifer, Steven and Kathleen.
Visitation at Fairfax Memorial Funeral Home,
9902 Braddock Rd., Fairfax, VA on Sunday,
November 17, 2019 from 2 to 4 and 6 to
8 p.m. Funeral service at The Falls Church
Anglican, 6565 Arlington Blvd. Falls Church,
VA on Monday at 10 a.m. Interment Fairfax
Memorial Park. Memorial contributions can be
made to Children’s National Hospital or St.Jude
Children’s Research Hospital.
http://www.fairfaxmemorialfuneralhome.com

GOETZINGER


RALPH GOLDENBERG
Ralph Goldenberg of Baltimore, MD,
passed away on November 11,2019
at the age of 81. He was survived
by his children, Col. Richard (Kelly)
Goldenberg, Erik (Joan) Goldenberg,
Melissa (Brad) Taylor, Ariel Arato,
and Dov (Jill) Goldenberg, brother,
Gil (Barbara) Goldenberg, and seven grandchil-
dren. Ralph was predeceased by his parents
Dora and Sam Goldenberg, and sister Millie
(Harry) Steinberg.
Funeral services are private. Please omit flow-
ers. Contributions in his memory may be sent
to Small Miracles Cat And Dog Rescue, 10236
Baltimore National Pike, Ellicott City, MD


  1. Arrangements by SOL LEVINSON &
    BROS., INC.sollevinson.com


GOLDENBERG


ELIZABETH J. IRBY
(Age 92)
Departed this life on November 11, 2019.
Beloved mother of Henry E. Irby, Jr., Zelda
Irby and Kenneth M. Irby, Sr. In addition
to her children she is survived by three
brothers; one sister; eight grandchildren;
six great-grandchildren; one great-great-
granddaughter; other relatives and friends.
Services will be held Saturday, November
16, fellowship with the family 10 a.m. until
time of funeral service 11 a.m. at Calvary
Episcopal Church, 820 6th Street NE. Inter-
ment Ft. Lincoln Cemetery. Services pro-
vides by John T. Rhines Funeral Home.

IRBY

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