Vietnam’s national flag is an icon of communism. And many Vietnamese-Americans say it does not represent them. Seattle’s Vietnamese community has long wanted official status for the country’s old flag. That day could be near. On Wednesday afternoon, a Seattle City Council committee will take up a resolution to recognize this heritage flag. If it passes, the full council will likely vote on it June 22. TRANSCRIPT Vietnam’s current flag shows a yellow star on a sea of red. And when Kim-Long Nguyen looks at it…

Nguyen: "Somehow I feel like it just looks like the blood." But when he sees the flag from before the war – a yellow one with red stripes... Nguyen: "I feel very peaceful." Nguyen is president of the Vietnamese Mutual Assistance Association, a Seattle-based nonprofit. He was part of an effort in 2004 to get King County to recognize this pre-communist era flag. It failed, he says, because of political concerns about relations with Vietnam.

Now, this issue is before the Seattle City Council. Councilmembers will consider a resolution to recognize this heritage flag as the official symbol of the city’s Vietnamese community. Nguyen says this simple act would mean a great deal, especially to veteran families. Nguyen: "They have a son, brother, husband, sister who passed away in Vietnam. They know that they [were] fighting for freedom and they'll not be forgot." Nguyen is a veteran, too. He lost his father in the war and came here alone as a refugee. Nguyen: "I feel that we lost everything. Only thing now is memory."