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Ho Chi Minh sandals
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The Ho Chi Minh sandals (Vietnamese dép lốp "tire sandal") are a form of sandal made from discarded tires. Along with the khăn rằn scarf, they were a distinctive clothing of Viet Cong soldiers. These shoes were often called "Ho Chi Minh sandals" or "Ho Chis" by Americans, after the Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Tom Dalzell (2009), "Ho Chi Minh sandals", The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang and Unconventional English, p. 511
Ho Chi Minh sandals
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Ho Chi Minh sandals, known in Vietnamese as dép lốp, are rudimentary yet robust footwear crafted from discarded vehicle tires, featuring a thick sole cut from tire tread and straps threaded from rubber inner tubes.[1][2] Developed in the 1940s by Vietnamese laborers and soldiers amid material shortages during conflicts with French colonial forces, these sandals exemplified resourcefulness in producing durable, low-cost alternatives to conventional shoes.[3][4] They gained prominence during the Vietnam War as standard issue for Viet Cong guerrillas and North Vietnamese Army troops, valued for their traction in rugged terrain, resistance to water and wear, and ease of local manufacture from captured or scavenged enemy tires.[1][2] Named by American forces after North Vietnam's leader Ho Chi Minh—who personally wore a pair made from a French military tire from 1947 until 1969—the sandals symbolized communist insurgents' adaptive ingenuity in prolonged guerrilla warfare.[3] Post-war, production persisted in Vietnam, evolving into a cultural artifact displayed in museums and occasionally worn by civilians, though mass-produced alternatives have largely supplanted them.[4]