Name: Dr.Eleanor
Ardel Vietti
Rank/Branch: Civilian/Surgeon
Unit: Christian
& Missionary Alliance
Date of Birth: 05
November 1927 (Ft. Worth, Texas)
Home City: Houston,
Texas
Date of Loss: 30
May 1962
Country of Loss: South
Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 123250N
1075927E (ZU250888)
Status (in 1973): Prisoner
of War
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Refno: 0011
Other Personnel in Incident: Rev.
Archie E. Mitchell; Daniel A. Gerber (both captured).
Remarks: Taken
from Leprosarium
Source: Compiled
from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government
Agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources,
interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK in 1998.
SYNOPSIS
Ardel Vietti was a twin and was
born on November 5, 1927 in Fort Worth, Texas. Her father was a geologist
and provided Ardel, her sister and brother with a comfortable youth, as
well as the experience of living in South America for several years.
Ardel attended Rice Institute, Nyack Missionary College (one summer), and
attended medical school at the University of Texas. Following her
residency, she applied for foreign service with CM&A and was certified
for appointment to the Ban Me Thuot Leprosarium in Vietnam.
The Ban Me Thuot Leprosarium was
located in dense jungle terrain in Darlac Province, South Vietnam, near
the provincial capitol of Ban Me Thuot. The Leprosarium was jointly
financed by The Christian and Missionary Alliance, the Mennonite Central
Committee and American Leprosy Missions, Inc. There were 56 Alliance
church groups in the areas outlying Ban Me Thuot in 1962.
The Leprosarium had a staff of nine,
including Rev. Archie Mitchell, the administrative officer; Dr. Ardell
Vietti, a surgeon, Daniel A. Gerber, and nurses, Misses Craig, Deets, Kingsbury
and Wilting. There were two others on staff; also, the Mitchell's
four children lived at the Leprosarium.
Late afternoon on Wednesday, May
30, 1962, a group of about 12 armed Viet Cong entered the Leprosarium compound
and abducted Dan Gerber, Dr. Vietti and Rev. Mitchell. The nurses
were sternly lectured on their betrayal of the Vietnamese people and assured
that they deserved immediate death, but were not molested or abducted.
Mrs. Mitchell and her four children were not harmed. The VC ransacked
all the buildings for anything they could use - linens, medicines, clothing
and surgical instruments. About 10:00 p.m., the Viet Cong finally
left taking their three prisoners with them.
When the three were captured, the
U.S. pledged all of its resources in order to see that everything possible
was done to get them back safely in 1963.
At the time, U.S. and South Vietnamese
intelligence discovered their probable location, but were never able to
rescue the three. Reports have continued to surface on them through
the years since 1962. Some of the members of their families believe
them to be still alive.
Now, 37 years later, Gerber, Vietti
and Mitchell are still missing. They were not military personnel,
nor were they engaged in highly paid jobs relating to the war. They
were just there to help sick Vietnamese people.
Although the U.S. has given the
Vietnamese information on Gerber, Vietti and Mitchell, the Vietnamese deny
any knowledge of them.


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