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Skull Session
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I was expecting ... I don't
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know what. Maybe some old hatboxes labeled "Confidential: Vietnam" languishing
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on a dusty shelf in a dusty closet. Instead, Paul Sledzik, an earnest young
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curator at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C.,
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leads me into a large, spotless storage room, unlocks File Cabinet 24, and
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slides out the top drawer. There they are: six human skulls. Keepsakes from the
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war that refuses to go away quietly. A cardboard divider, no different from
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what's normally used to ship grapefruit, keeps the skulls from banging together
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like marbles.
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"These two are my
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favorites," Sledzik says. "I kind of go back and forth about which is the most
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interesting."
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He points
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out two skulls that are indisputably the eye-catchers of the bunch.
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"Interesting" is an understatement. These are the Velvet Elvises of war booty.
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The first skull (inventory No. 1987.3017.13) is slathered with graffiti. Above
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the eye sockets someone scrawled "Chu Lai trip skull." The doodles include a
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peace sign and a marijuana pipe. "Pat," "Chuckie," "Frank," and "Rich" are
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among those who added their names, as if they were giddy college teammates
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autographing a football after a big homecoming win.
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The skull is that of a 15-to-20-year-old Asian male. It had
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been confiscated from two U.S. servicemen at Da Nang airfield in the fall of
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1971. They had inquired about the proper procedure for shipping their prize
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home, apparently oblivious to the fact that body parts aren't considered
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military surplus. "If you read the case file," notes Sledzik, "it sounds as if
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they thought there was nothing wrong with this."
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His other
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favorite skull (No. 1987.3017.23) came from a slightly older Asian male.
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Authorities took it off the hands of a GI stationed at Pleiku in 1972. Somebody
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at the base was dabbling in morbid art therapy. An undercoat of shocking-blue
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paint had been applied to the skull; red and yellow Day-Glo vertical stripes
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were then added in the back. A fat, black candle--melted firmly in place, wick
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still intact--sits atop the skull amid a puddle of congealed wax. A drill hole
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is visible in the cranium, evidence that this was once a hanging skull-candle.
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Three of the four remaining skulls (one belonging to a woman, all believed to
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be Vietnamese) also underwent what is euphemistically known as "post-mortem
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decorative treatment." For example, the eye cavities of skull No.
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1987.3017.09--found inside a footlocker at Fort Campbell, Ky., in 1971--bear
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the inscriptions "Jimi Vivar 70-71" (left) and "Viet Nam que loco" (right).
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"Things Go Better With Castro Coke" and "Stay High Stay Alive" adorn the top
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and sides.
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The National Museum of Health and Medicine is
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located on the grounds of Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Its roots extend
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back to the Civil War. Thus, visitors can find on display a swatch of diseased
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colon removed from a Union soldier plagued by terminal diarrhea, and pieces of
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John Wilkes Booth's vertebrae, not to mention such miscellany as Siamese twins
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in a jar and a Peruvian mummy. However, the oddest items in the oddball
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collection--items that the government doesn't quite know what to do with--are
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kept in permanent storage. Like the brain of Charles Guiteau, the man who
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assassinated President Garfield. Like the Vietnam War skulls.
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I'd visited the museum
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several times, but learned about the skulls only recently from a friend. They
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immediately ruined several nights' sleep, prompting me to pay Sledzik a visit.
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Vietnam, after all, is my war. And I have the draft-lottery deferment to prove
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it. The assumption, says Sledzik, is that American grunts picked up the skulls
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in their battlefield travels: souvenirs to someday show the grandkids. But now
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that the United States and Vietnam are busy re-establishing diplomatic
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relations, now that Hanoi may be in the running for the next TCBY yogurt
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franchise, why not give 'em back? For the sake of symbolic closure. For sappy
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sentimental reasons. By rights, it seems to me, a person's head ought to rest
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in peace, if not near his or her body, then at least on the same continent.
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Shows
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what I know.
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Trophies of war--from helmets, bayonets, and other
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innocuous spoils to the grisly byproducts of dismemberment--have a long, if not
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proud, history. In the latter category, the practice probably reached its nadir
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with headshrinking. Sledzik walks across the storage room and fetches another
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rare museum piece: a perfectly preserved head no larger than a tennis ball.
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It's the handiwork of the Shuar, a notoriously ferocious tribe that inhabits
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the forests of Ecuador and Peru. The Shuar--who are to headshrinking what the
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Amish are to quilting--were transforming enemies into trinkets as recently as
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the 1950s.
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But such
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macabre behavior transcends geographic bounds. In medieval England the severed
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heads of those who crossed the throne were regularly stuck on pikes and mounted
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in public places, London Bridge being a choice site. Oliver Cromwell was
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decapitated after death and his head left on a pole in Westminster Hall for 27
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years. Across the world, an 18 th century war shrine in the Japanese
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town of Nara once contained the ears of 20,000 Koreans. The Japanese reportedly
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moved on to bigger things in World War II. The archives of the College of
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Physicians of Philadelphia contain a note dictated by a fellow of the college
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in 1944 that reads, "Recently a Japanese officer sent 210 Chinese heads to
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Japan as trophies to be displayed. This number was exceeded by another officer
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who sent 220 heads."
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Vietnam was not the first time that U.S.
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soldiers indulged in noggin nabbing. Marines amassed piles of heads during the
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Philippine Insurrection of 1899-1901. Army records show that when the remains
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of Japanese soldiers killed in the Mariana Islands were repatriated in 1984,
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some 60 percent of the corpses were headless.
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Alas,
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there is a semi-underground market--collectively called "the bone trade"--that
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trafficks in body parts imbued with historic significance or celebrity cachet.
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What is reputed to be Gen. George Custer's left pinkie has, over the years,
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been traded for a horse and sold for its weight in gold. The Marquis de Sade's
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head is known to be "above ground," as they say in the business. Napoleon's
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penis--lopped off during his autopsy--was purchased a few years ago by a New
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York urologist.
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Bob White, a respected Baltimore memorabilia dealer and
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owner of one of the world's largest collection of shrunken heads (35 and
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counting), says the Vietnam trophy skulls would find buyers. "As sick as it
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sounds," he says, "they would even be a good investment" (though not as good as
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Marilyn Monroe's nipples--rumored to have been snipped off during her autopsy,
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along with some locks of hair--which White estimates "could bring well over
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$25,000").
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Another collector of shrunken
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heads, who requested anonymity, has a Vietnam War photograph of a group of
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American soldiers posing by a crude altar fashioned from skulls and bones,
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reminiscent of the ghastly constructions of the Cambodian Khmer Rouge. "They're
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showing the Angel of Death that they're not afraid," he explains.
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Desecration of the dead serves the dual purpose of steeling one's own courage
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and intimidating the enemy. But, the collector adds, "There is a difference
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between taking a trophy and a souvenir."
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The distinction seems irrelevant as I stand
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inside the National Museum of Health and Medicine holding the bright blue
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skull-candle in cupped hands. Part of me is worried about dropping the damn
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thing. Part of me feels obliged to smash it against the wall. I ask Sledzik if
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the Vietnamese Embassy in Washington might want custody of the skulls. "As far
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as I know, they've never been offered," he replies. "We can't say for sure
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they're even combatants."
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His
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assistant, Lenore Barbian, cautions against practicing moral hegemony. Most
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Asians, she says, "are not very careful about the disposal of human remains.
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It's not part of the culture. It's a different way of viewing death."
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She's right, of course. But forensic specialists are
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trained to view the world through dispassionate eyes. I'm unschooled. I'm also,
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for better or worse, a creature of Western sensibilities, in which crude lines
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are customarily drawn between the murderous imperatives of battle and the
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wanton bloodlust of barbarism. Come Memorial Day--when the country is absorbed
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in the annual rituals of war and remembrance, when flags bloom like
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red-white-and-blue wildflowers on thousands of graves--my thoughts will wander
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to "Rich" and "Chuckie" and "Jimi Vivar." They are on the loose in America.
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Middle-aged men now. How'd the readjustment to civilian life go? What gimmicks
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are they employing these days to stave off the Angel of Death?
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Mostly, though, I will think
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about six lives and six ignominious ends. Something tells me those hapless
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Vietnam skulls deserve a better resting place than File Cabinet 24. Yet, I
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can't say exactly why. I just feel it in my bones.
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