Friday, September 17, 2010

Get wed without getting married at Ramana

A model performs wedding dress in a fashion show in HCMC - Photo: Kieu Giang
The Ramana Hotel Saigon will hold a special evening event about weddings on September 18 at 5 p.m.

The event called “Wedding Experience Night” will be organized in conjunction with companies that specialize in wedding services and products such as Milan for wedding gowns, make up and photo albums, Y Tuong for wedding cards, Graphic Chocolate for wedding gifts and Lolita Lempicka for perfume .

The event aims to give couples an experience of what it is like to organize a wedding. There will be screenings of real wedding videos; brides to be will invited to organize a wedding party; try on wedding gowns; be served food like a real wedding party and consulted on health and beauty care before the wedding.

The hotel and vendors will give out prizes such as accommodation, dinners at the hotel for two, expensive perfumes, make-up vouchers at wedding studios and beauty salons.

The hotel will also give 5% discounts to any couple who books their wedding party that night.

For reservations or inquiries, contact Banquet team at 3843 9999 or email to events@ramanasaigon.com

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Ethnology museum hosts Mid-Autumn celebration

Hands-on fun: In addition to taking part in folk games and performances, children will learn how to make traditional toys at the museum. — VNS Photos

Hands-on fun: In addition to taking part in folk games and performances, children will learn how to make traditional toys at the museum. — VNS Photos

Ancient games: Children play tug-of-war at the Museum of Ethnology.

Ancient games: Children play tug-of-war at the Museum of Ethnology.

HA NOI — The Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology in Ha Noi will host its annual celebration of the Mid-Autumn festival through next Monday, with a theme this year of Viet Nam – China Colours.

This year's programme will include traditional games of both countries, as well as toys such as lanterns, kites and Chinese masks, and performances of lion and dragon dances and water puppetry, making this a great opportunity for children to explore the similarities and differences in the Vietnamese and Chinese cultures, according to the museum.

Visitors to the museum during the celebration will have the opportunity to compete and win prizes in Chinese games, dress in traditional costumes, and hear story tellers share legends of the Mid-Autumn Festival.

The museum will also screen films about the cultures of Viet Nam and China and – new to the venue this year – will host a performances of boi singing, a traditional music of southern Viet Nam.

Visitors will also be able to experience the brewing and drinking of Pu'er tea from China's Yunnan Province, as well as participate in traditional cake-making classes. Representatives of the Naxi culture of southern China will also talk to visitors about the ancient hieroglyphs of the culture and the Mid-Autumn Festival of their homeland.

People who purchase tickets in advance for Monday will enjoy a compelling programme including a lion dance, animal circus, Chinese opera, lantern parade, and sampling of Vietnamese and Chinese mooncakes.

The celebration is being held with the co-operation of the Ethnic Museum of Yunnan, the Yunnan Opera Institute, and the Chinese Embassy in Viet Nam. Tickets are available at the Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology for VND25,000 for adults, VND3,000 for children, and VND5,000 for students.

For this year's celebration, the museum will make an extra effort to serve disadvantaged children, and will present 100 gifts to kids from craft villages and vocational training centres. — VNS

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Designer adds flare to traditional dress

HCM CITY — Fashion designer Vo Viet Chung has presented his latest creation – a nine-train ao dai (traditional dress) accompanied by a gold and diamond-inlaid head-dress.

According to the designer, the creation includes nine 100m-long trains with sophisticated dragon and phoenix embroidery patterns. "The nine trains symbolise the nine branches of the Cuu Long (Mekong) River," he said.

One thousand metres of silk has been used to create the dress, while 0.5kg gold and 2,000 diamonds have been used to beautify the head-dress.

The unique dress will be presented to the public at a fashion show in HCM City on October 4, before being put on display in Ha Noi during the city's 1,000th anniversary.

Livers contract for the onset of Oktoberfest

HA NOI — A traditional German Oktoberfest will be held in Ha Noi on September 24-25.

Hosted by the German Embassy in Viet Nam, the event is among the activities for German Year in Viet Nam as part of the celebrations of the 35th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

The Oktoberfest this year will include the Munich-based band The Happy Bavarians will perform during the event.

First held 200 years ago in Munich, the world's biggest beer festival attracts around 6 million people every year.

To mark the 200th anniversary of the Oktoberfest Festival in Germany, Lion Restaurant in HCM City will hold its own annual Oktoberfest on October 1 and 2.

There will be a selection of draft beers as usual but this year the festival will also feature traditional German dishes, music shows, fire dances, bartending performances, and games.

New TV drama highlights Hanoian lifestyle, customs

HA NOI— Lifestyle, customs and the traditional way of thinking of Hanoians are the topic of a new series, which began on the VTV1 channel last night.

Entitled Nep Nha (Family Customs), the 40-episode series focuses on an old Hanoian family. Produced by the Viet Nam Television Centre (VFC), the series features several well-known actors and actresses. — VNS

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Diamond studded Ao Dai marks 20 years in fashion

Miss Vietnam 2006 Mai Phuong Thuy wears special ao dai by designer Vo Viet Chung - Photo: The organizers
To mark 20 years in fashion and welcome the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi, Vietnamese designer Vo Viet Chung will introduce a special ao dai (Vietnamese long dress) at a live show at the White Palace Convention Center in HCMC’s Phu Nhuan District on October 4.

The dress has set a Vietnamese record as it has nine back-flaps that trail for 100 meters each, symbolizing the nine branches of Cuu Long River. The dress features 2,000 diamonds and gold decorative pieces and 1,000 meters of silk fabric from the three regions of Vietnam.

Zeta Company has sponsored a diamond crown worth over VND1 billion to compliment the dress. Miss Vietnam 2006 Mai Phuong Thuy will wear the dress and crown at the show.

At the show called Hoi Trung Duong , Chung will also present his latest collection in a fashion parade featuring Miss Grand Slam Asia 2009 Huong Giang, Chung Thuc Quyen, Vu Hoang Diep and about 30 other models.

Singers Thanh Lam, Ho Quynh Huong, Phuong Thanh and Trang Nhung will perform the music.

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Kids paint for a happy Mid Autumn at Hotel Equatorial

A girl admires her friends’ paintings at the exhibition that opened at the Equatorial Hotel HCMC on Tuesday - Photo: Kieu Giang
A painting exhibition with a difference named Young Painter 2010 organized by the Hotel Equatorial HCMC features artistic expressions by disabled and street children.

“We firmly believe that such an event only helps to bring out best artistic abilities of children who have gone through un-imaginable difficulties in their lives,” James Montenegro, the hotel’s general manager said.

“As this is the 13th year that the hotel has hosted this event it has already become a tradition for us,” Montenego added.

The exhibition introduces 100 colorful paintings depicting joyful moments of children in the Mid-Autumn festival and paintings of landscapes and still-lifes.

They were created by street children from the HCMC Center for Education and Vocational Training for Street Children and disabled children from Anh Minh and Hy Vong 1 School for Deaf Children, Gia Dinh Disabled Children and Thai Binh High School.

Visitors at the exhibition on Tuesaday morning said they were amazed to see how beautiful some of the paintings were.

Montenegro said all the money raised from the sale of the paintings would go to help disadvantaged children in HCMC.

All of the paintings are priced from US$40 to US$50.

To share with disabled and street children a happy Mid-Autumn festival, the Hotel Equatorial HCMC together with celebrities including actor Chi Bao, singer Hien Thuc and model Trung Cuong handed over 100 gifts of candy, moon cakes and lanterns to the schools that had contributed the paintings.

The exhibition is on display at the hotel lobby at 242 Tran Binh Trong Street, HCMC’s District 5 until September 30.

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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Kids paint for a happy Mid Autumn at Hotel Equatorial

A girl admires her friends’ paintings at the exhibition that opened at the Equatorial Hotel HCMC on Tuesday - Photo: Kieu Giang
A painting exhibition with a difference named Young Painter 2010 organized by the Hotel Equatorial HCMC features artistic expressions by disabled and street children.

“We firmly believe that such an event only helps to bring out best artistic abilities of children who have gone through un-imaginable difficulties in their lives,” James Montenegro, the hotel’s general manager said.

“As this is the 13th year that the hotel has hosted this event it has already become a tradition for us,” Montenego added.

The exhibition introduces 100 colorful paintings depicting joyful moments of children in the Mid-Autumn festival and paintings of landscapes and still-lifes.

They were created by street children from the HCMC Center for Education and Vocational Training for Street Children and disabled children from Anh Minh and Hy Vong 1 School for Deaf Children, Gia Dinh Disabled Children and Thai Binh High School.

Visitors at the exhibition on Tuesaday morning said they were amazed to see how beautiful some of the paintings were.

Montenegro said all the money raised from the sale of the paintings would go to help disadvantaged children in HCMC.

All of the paintings are priced from US$40 to US$50.

To share with disabled and street children a happy Mid-Autumn festival, the Hotel Equatorial HCMC together with celebrities including actor Chi Bao, singer Hien Thuc and model Trung Cuong handed over 100 gifts of candy, moon cakes and lanterns to the schools that had contributed the paintings.

The exhibition is on display at the hotel lobby at 242 Tran Binh Trong Street, HCMC’s District 5 until September 30.

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Guitarist Pierre Laniau to perform in Hanoi

Guitar soloist Pierre Laniau
International guitar soloist Pierre Laniau will perform for two nights at the French Cultural Exchange Center, L’Espace, 24 Trang Tien Street, Hanoi on September 20 and 23, reports Vietnamplus.

On the opening night, audience will have a chance to enjoy Spanish-style music with works by French composer and pianist Erik Satie (1866-1925). On the second night, September 23, Laniau will perform Mozart and contemporary works. All the performances will begin at 8 p.m.

After working with master artists such as Alberto Ponce and Narciso Yepes, the French born Laniau has selected the ten-string guitar, and experimented with music by Satie, Debussy, Copland, Gershwin, and Mozart without having to rearrange them.

Laniau has given performances in 80 countries around the world. In France, he often plays at important festivals such as Festival Montpellier, Lille and big stages in Paris such as Salle Gaveau, Le Cirque d’Hiver, Le Caller Sylvia Montfort.

Tickets are available at L’Espace for VND100,000 and VND50,000.

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Paint by the bay like Monet

The famous lighthouse on Ke Ga Bay - Photo: Mong Binh
An American Vietnamese artist will hold an open-air landscape painting workshop from November 10-14 at Princess d’Annam Resort and Spa on Ke Ga Bay in Binh Thuan Province.

For four days, the San Francisco-born Tammy Nguyen will set up the class’s easels on the shores of the Bay with views of the beautiful shoreline and famous lighthouse.

Jean-Philippe Beghin, general manager of the resort, expects the first annual Painter’s Retreat workshop and package would attract art beginners from Hong Kong, Singapore and elsewhere in the region.

“Everyone who visits Ke Ga Bay leaves with an impression of this spectacular natural landscape,” Beghin said. “Now, with guidance from a renowned American art instructor, Tammy Nguyen, they’ll have the opportunity to leave with their own painting of it.”

Nguyen is a graduate of the Cooper Union School of Art in New York City and traveled to Vietnam on a Fulbright Grant to study traditional Vietnamese lacquer painting in 2007. Her preferred medium is oil, but her investigations of Vietnamese culture have journeyed through lacquer, silk and even embroidery.

“En plein air (outdoor) painting has been enormously influential in Vietnam and continues to inspire many of Thursday’s young artists,” Nguyen said in a statement. “Monet and Renoir were guiding stars for such Vietnamese masters as Nguyen Sang, Bui Xuan Phai, and Nguyen Gia Tri, and on Thursday for many of Vietnam’s fledgling painters.”

Beghin said resorts these days needed to do more than be a blank canvas for someone’s holiday. “We need to provide the tools for the making of memories as well, and this Painters’ Retreat is our gambit.”

Nguyen will work with students to develop texture, color and light. The workshop allows for communal instruction and one-on-one assessments and assistance by Nguyen who has had students in the United States and Vietnam.

The brushes, oil paints, linseed oil, smoks and easels are included. At the end of the retreat, students will be able to share their artworks and experiences in a salon show.

The US$1,525 package covers three four-hour seminars, art materials, three-nights’ accommodation, daily breakfast, two cocktail dinners with the instructor and a spa treatment. Additional charges for supplementary guests sharing the same room, but not the workshop, are US$240 per person.

For more information, call the resort’s marketing director Zulkifli Rahman on (08) 3845 5990 or email dosm@princessannam.com.

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Italy helps to preserve Hanoi’s Old Quarter

Italy, with its expertise in restoring ancient historical buildings and artifacts, such as the city of Genoa, is ready to assist Hanoi to restore and improve its Old Quarter.

Speaking at a seminar on improving the role and efficiency of the local officials who are responsible for managing Hanoi’s Old Quarter on Wednesday, Cesare Bieller, head of the Political and Cultural Section at the Italian Embassy in Hanoi, stressed that preserving the Old Quarter must be a shared responsibility that includes the whole community and needs to be carried out to improve living standards and economic efficiency.

According to leading architect Dao Ngoc Nghiem, former Director of Hanoi’s Department of Architectural Planning, the Old Quarter is extremely valuable to the local people, commerce, culture and the city’s architecture.

Therefore, any preservation must conform to the Government’s regulations and be developed and managed in cooperation with local officials and the public, he said.

Hanoi’s old houses and buildings reflect the city’s different architectural styles during each period of its history so they need to be restored and preserved, he added.

According to the Management Board for Hanoi’s Old Quarter, which covers nearly 100ha and includes almost 1,000 old houses, it is now seriously run down due to the increasing number of residents living in the area.

At present, Hanoi is introducing measures to preserve and promote its cultural value, as well as attempting to reduce the population to minimize the negative impacts on the Old Quarter.

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Hanoi Polish film festival to mark 60 years of ties

taraka
Sweet Rush (Polish: Tatarak)

Five films will be screened at a Polish film festival to be held in Hanoi from September 19 to 23 to mark the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Vietnam and Poland.

Among them will be “Sweet Rush” (Polish: Tatarak), directed by the world-renowned auteur Andrzej Wajda, which chronicles the love affair between the neglected wife of a doctor whose two sons died in World War II and a man half her age.

The film won the Alfred-Bauer prize for innovation at the 59th Berlin International Film Festival last year.

The other films to be screened are “How to live,” “Mr Kuka’s advice,” “God’s little village,” and “Time to die.”

Poland has chosen these films to introduce to Vietnamese audiences its people and culture, Lai Van Sinh, head of the Cinematography Department, said.

Polish cinema is considered among the best in Europe and the world, he added.

The films will be screened at the National Cinema Centre where the films’ directors, actors, and producers will hold exchanges with audiences.

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Hanoi Polish film festival to mark 60 years of ties

Five films will be screened at a Polish film festival to be held in Hanoi from September 19 to 23 to mark the 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between Vietnam and Poland.

Among them will be “Sweet Rush” (Polish: Tatarak), directed by the world-renowned auteur Andrzej Wajda, which chronicles the love affair between the neglected wife of a doctor whose two sons died in World War II and a man half her age.

The film won the Alfred-Bauer prize for innovation at the 59th Berlin International Film Festival last year.

The other films to be screened are “How to live,” “Mr Kuka’s advice,” “God’s little village,” and “Time to die.”

Poland has chosen these films to introduce to Vietnamese audiences its people and culture, Lai Van Sinh, head of the Cinematography Department, said.

Polish cinema is considered among the best in Europe and the world, he added.

The films will be screened at the National Cinema Centre where the films’ directors, actors, and producers will hold exchanges with audiences.

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Polish films to entertain Ha Noi audience

HA NOI — Five newly produced films by Polish directors will be screened at the Ha Noi Cinema Centre, 87 Lang Ha Street, from this Sunday to next Thursday as a cultural exchange between the two countries.

The films include Fuka's Advice by director Dariuz Gajewski, God's Small Village by Jacek Bromski, Before the Sunset by Jacek Blawut and Time to Die by Dorota Kedzierzawska.

All the screenings will be at 7.30pm and 8pm. Tickets free at the cinema centre.

Up to 74 Quang Nam relic sites in ruins

QUANG NAM — As many as 74 historic sites in the central province of Quang Nam are in ruins, the provincial Relic Sites Department says.

Thirty-four others were in serious condition with no financial source for upgrading.

Japanese pianist Koyama to perform in Ha Noi

HA NOI — Japanese pianist Michie Koyama will give a solo concert entitled Beethoven Cycle at the Ha Noi Opera House on Friday and Sunday.

Koyama, who started to play piano at age 5, won the fourth prize at Frederic Chopin piano contest in Warsaw in 1985.

She has performed in Europe and America.

HTV show backs bright students with scholarships

HCM CITY — A reality show that identifies and supports talented students has begun on HCM City Television's channel 9 on Wednesdays.

The first episode of Vi Hat Giong Viet (For Vietnamese Talents) yesterday featured Luu Nguyen Hong Quang, winner of this year's National Chemistry Competition.

The 10-minute show, produced by Sai Gon Film Joint-Stock Company and HTV, will feature an outstanding student every week and provide them scholarships. — VNS

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Culture Vulture

The First Ha Noi International Piano Competition with 63 participants from South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, Canada, Russia, Taiwan and host-country, Viet Nam, ended on Sunday. The event was organised by the Viet Nam National Academy of Music (VNAM). Director of VNAM Ngo Van Thanh discusses the event with Culture Vulture.

This is the first time Viet Nam launched an international piano competition. Was it a success?

The First Ha Noi International Piano Competition was created to mark Polish composer Frederik Chopin's 200th birthday and one of the events to celebrate the capital Ha Noi's 1,000th birthday. It was a festival for pianists and piano lovers. This was an opportunity for the VNAM to host a music event that met international standards. It was also a chance for talented pianists to shine, and for Vietnamese music academics to meet international people in the profession.

It's great we were supported strongly by the international community. The event was successful for two reasons. First, we had qualified piano teachers who did a great job organising the event. Second, is the increased role of the private sector in the development of the arts in Viet Nam.

The event was sponsored by individuals and organisations like Techcombank, Vietnam Airlines and many overseas Vietnamese.

The competition was launched 30 years after Vietnamese pianist Dang Thai Son became the first Asian to win the prestigious International Frederik Chopin Piano Competition in Poland in 1980. How can Vietnamese artists win more prizes at the international competition in the coming years?

The competition itself aims to improve Vietnamese classical music teaching and performance skills. During the years, we have had many talents like accordionist Nguyen Quynh Trang who won the Hong Kong Competition for Young Asian Musicians in 2001 or soprano Bich Thuy, the first prize winner in the International Opera Contest in Thailand in 2008.

Pianists include Luu Hong Quang, who won a special prize at the Asia Chopin International Piano Competition in Tokyo in 2006 and a second prize at the Valtidone International Piano Competition in Italy in 2008, Do Hoang Linh Chi, who won the first prize for his piano performance at the 3rd ASEAN International Concerto Competition in Indonesia in 2009, and Luu Duc Anh, who won the first prize at the piano competition known as "Classical Sonata" held in Sydney, Australia in 2009.

International competitions are good opportunities for artists and teachers to study and stay up-to-date with the international music standards.

Is it true that Vietnamese music teachers are highly appreciated by the international community?

We have a powerful set of young talents who have been trained in a strong music environment. Many countries in the region wish they had a training institution like the Viet Nam Academy of Music, which boasts a generation of teachers who were trained in Russia before creating a professional training curriculum.

Some regional countries lack intermediate level training. In contrast, Viet Nam seeks and encourages potential talents from a very early age and trains them over a long period time.

The Government has supplied about 80 pianos to the academy, worth hundreds of billions of dong.

With more than 270 piano students and many international prizes, would you say the piano is a particular strength for Vietnamese musicians?

Piano has always drawn the most students because the piano is regarded as one of the most prestigious musical instrument, and that is true in many countries. Thus, the piano is certainly popular in Viet Nam.

At present, drawing foreign talents, both teachers and students, is currently a trend in the region. Is Viet Nam following this trend?

Actually, Singapore and Thailand now have Western teachers and even invite international managers. It is a fast-growing trend and it draws many foreign talents. There are many Vietnamese, Chinese, Thais and Indonesians who now train in Singapore.

In addition, Russian-trained Vietnamese teachers are always updating modern music knowledge. — VNS

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Hanoi craft villages show off their wares

battrang

Handicrafts made from bamboo and rattan, silk, and gold by artisans from dozens of craft villages in Hanoi will be on display at a festival opening Thursday.

“Thang Long - Hanoi Craft Villages and Streets” at Bach Thao Botanical Park on Hoang Hoa Tham Street will showcase five of the most renowned Hanoi craft villages -- Bat Trang ceramic village, Kieu Ky gold plating village, Van Phuc silk village, Son Dong handicraft village, and Phu Vinh rattan village.

Hanoi’s 36 old streets and wards will be recreated at the event which will also feature the traditional handicrafts sold on Hang Non, Hang Dong, Hang Ma, Lan Ong, and Hang Quat Streets.

More than 100 old photos of craft villages and streets and record works created by Hanoian artisans will be on display.

There will be nearly 200 booths showcasing wood, bamboo and rattan, silk, and gold works, cast statues, folk paintings, and traditional Vietnamese hats made in 50 cities and provinces.

The festival from September 16 to 21, organized by the Ministries of Culture, Sports and Tourism and Agriculture and Rural Development, the city people’s committee, the Vietnam Association of Craft Villages, and the Vietnam Handicraft Exporters’ Association, will mark the 1000th anniversary of the founding of Thang Long – Hanoi next month.

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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Hanoi set for nights of western classical music

Koyama Michie
Koyama Michie

The Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra will host concerts by world-renowned Japanese conductor Tetsuji Honna and Japanese pianist Koyama Michie this week.

Koyama, 51, will perform works by Beethoven like Leonore Overture No.1, Piano Concerto No.5 “Emperor” in E Major, and Symphony No.5 in C Minor.

She started learning the piano at the age of five and went to high school and university at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music.

Koyama has won several international awards – in the 1980’s she became the first Japanese pianist to win prizes at the Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition in Moscow and Chopin International Piano Competition in Warsaw.

She has performed at major music festivals. In 1999 she took part in the International Chopin Festival in Spain, playing Mozart, Bach, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, and Chopin.

Tetsuji Honna, also a multiple award winner, has been the VNSO’s musical adviser and conductor since 2001.

The concerts will be held at the Hanoi Opera House Wednesday and Thursday and tickets will cost VND150,000 (US$7.70) to VND300,000.

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Phan Thiet set for charming Kate festival

Champa
Traditional Kate festival originated in Cham people
Photo: Tuoi Tre

The Cham people will organize their biggest and most important festival, Kate, next month with processions, rituals, and cultural activities at the Po Sah Inu Tower in Phan Thiet.

The highlights will include colorful traditional rituals like a palanquin procession carrying the costumes of Goddess Po Sah Inu and the Tong On ceremony to keep away “poisonous” winds. The Cham believe these winds can cause diseases and bring bad luck to families.

Then there will be a ceremony to bathe the lingam-yoni altar and make an offering of wine. The lingam is a phallic symbol of the Hindu god Shiva and the yoni represents the female.

The festival will also feature the paranung drum dance, other ethnic music and dance, and folk games.

For the benefit of tourists and other visitors, Champa artisans will demonstrate traditional brocade and ceramic production.

There will be a contest to make cakes like banh tet (cylindrical glutinous rice cake filled with green bean paste and fatty pork) and banh gung (ginger cake).

The Kate festival falls on the first day of the seventh month in the Cham calendar (September-October in the solar calendar). It is celebrated in honor of Po Sah Inu, who according to legend helped the Cham grow wet rice.

It also marks harvest and is an occasion for childless couples to entreat Po Sah Inu to bless them with children.

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Japanese culture enthralls HCMC youths

cosplay
A cosplay performance at the Vietnam-Japan Day
Photo: Phuong Thuy

The Ho Chi Minh City Youth Cultural House was a splash of colors last Sunday: Young people were dressed up as Lolita and as characters from popular comic books; people sat around tables folding color papers under instruction from an origami group; camera flashes were going off everywhere.

It was the Vietnam- Japan Day hosted by the Japanese consulate, and the venue was filled with young people.

In another corner, some people were trying to make sense of ukiyo-e, or traditional Japanese paintings, featuring motifs like landscapes and historic tales.

Displayed in a room were an elegant red kimono, vases with flowers, handmade toys, and miniatures of Japanese heritage sites.

Kim Hoan, 24, looks closely at the miniatures, reading the descriptions in Japanese and Vietnamese, and occasionally explains to a friend.

“When I was a student, I often went to Japanese events like this,” Hoan, who majored in Japanese and is a regular at the annual event, says.

“Though I’m busy with work now, I still try to make time for this event.

“In previous years, there was only an exhibition of documents and pictures. This year, there are real objects that people can see and touch.”

There is a group of Asian youths. One speaks in Japanese and the other replies in Vietnamese. They are from the Tounichi Group, a Japanese club at the Ho Chi Minh City University of Social Science and Humanities.

“We’ve come here to see how Japanese culture is showcased,” Akaishi Hironori, who has learnt Vietnamese for three years and plans to get a degree in Vietnamese studies, explains.

“I can see the connection between the two cultures. For example, Vietnamese banana flowers are used in the Japanese flower arrangement, which I have never seen before,” Hironori says pointing to a large white vase with a variety of beautiful flowers.

“I really appreciate Vietnamese who are interested in Japan,” Nakamura Keiichi, who is in intermediate Vietnamese class says. “Friends at school sometimes ask me about different aspects of Japanese culture”

Hironori adds: “The event is indeed a good opportunity to promote our culture. However, I’d like to see more interaction between Japanese and Vietnamese -- like talk shows and music performances by people from the two countries.”

Present at the festival to support the drama performance by his Vietnamese students is Hidehisha Yusa, a teacher and manager of Nicco Japanese School.

“In our school, we have speech contests and Japanese festivals. This event is on a larger scale and open to everyone, not just students of Japanese. I’m delighted to see so many people coming today.”

Asked what event he had been most anticipating, he replies instantly: “Cosplay -- it is so colorful and fun!”

Cosplay, short for costume play, is a performance art in which participants dress up to represent fictional characters, mostly out of comic books. The art, which began in Japan, has now spread worldwide and is a big attraction among young people.

Indeed, at the Youth Cultural House, the cosplay venue was mobbed by people longing to see their favorite comic characters. There are excited shouts and screams and thunderous applause at the beginning and end of each performance.

At the back, standing on his toes to get a view past the throng, is Thomas Paine, an American who teaches history in the city.

“I used to live in Japan for two years and enjoy comic books, science fiction, and beautiful cosplay shows. It is great to see the cosplay performances today. I’m happy!”

After the performance, your correspondent met up with a petite French blonde in black glasses. But she turned out to be a Vietnamese girl, Truc Anh, 13.

She fell in love with Japanese comic books while in primary school and is a member of some cosplay groups on Facebook. Truc Anh takes part in cosplay performances three times a year, playing characters like Lolita and the comic book Card captor Sakura’s heroine Sakura Kinomoto.

“My parents allow me to do it as long as it doesn’t affect my study,” she replies when asked if they know about her interest.

“The costumes are a bit expensive but I don’t want to ask for money from them [parents]. And I hardly earn anything from cosplay performances. So, I have begun an online shop with a friend and we make enough money for the clothes.”

She points to her French maid costume and says it cost VND350,000 (US$18).

At 6pm the event is over but many people still linger.

“Japan has a very rich culture and they know how to turn normal things like drinking tea or arranging flowers into an art,” Hoan says.

“It is because they feel strongly about the need to preserve and promote their culture. I hope we can advertise more of our culture to the world like them.”

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Charity Cycle Adventure in the Central

Saigon Children’s Charity is appealing for people to join a three-day cycling adventure in Central Vietnam starting November 18.

Instead of spending the weekend at home, you are invited to raise money for charity by cycling 150km through small villages near Hue City. The ride slowly climbs to the naturally beautiful Ba Na Mountains of central Vietnam. Riders will also discover some of the most exquisite coastlines in South East Asia.

Participants will pass temples, colorful pagodas and stunning beaches before the route takes them off the beaten track. The end destination is Hoi An, where you can explore the ancient town that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

There is a US$450 registration fee, which will cover all costs of the ride, including transportation, equipment, meals and accommodation. Participants are asked to raise a minimum of US$500 in sponsorship, which will go to support Saigon Children’s Charity (SCC).

 The money raised for SCC will play a vital role in supporting children from disadvantaged backgrounds in Vietnam, helping to provide educational opportunities that they otherwise could not afford. SCC was founded in 1992, operating in the South of Vietnam, around HCMC, extending to the Cambodian border and down into the Mekong Delta.

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Charity Cycle Adventure in the Central

Saigon Children’s Charity is appealing for people to join a three-day cycling adventure in Central Vietnam starting November 18.

Instead of spending the weekend at home, you are invited to raise money for charity by cycling 150km through small villages near Hue City. The ride slowly climbs to the naturally beautiful Ba Na Mountains of central Vietnam. Riders will also discover some of the most exquisite coastlines in South East Asia.

Participants will pass temples, colorful pagodas and stunning beaches before the route takes them off the beaten track. The end destination is Hoi An, where you can explore the ancient town that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

There is a US$450 registration fee, which will cover all costs of the ride, including transportation, equipment, meals and accommodation. Participants are asked to raise a minimum of US$500 in sponsorship, which will go to support Saigon Children’s Charity (SCC).

 The money raised for SCC will play a vital role in supporting children from disadvantaged backgrounds in Vietnam, helping to provide educational opportunities that they otherwise could not afford. SCC was founded in 1992, operating in the South of Vietnam, around HCMC, extending to the Cambodian border and down into the Mekong Delta.

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Get bookish at Hanoi fair

The third Vietnam International Book Fair will be held at the Vietnam Exhibition & Fair Center, 146 Giang Vo Street in Hanoi from September 17-21 as part of activities to mark the 1,000th anniversary of the capital city.

The event, held every two years, will display publications of nearly 80 publishing houses, book distribution companies, book stores and printers across the country.

The fair has been expanded with participation of foreign publishing houses and book distributors. The Frankfurt center for international book fairs and exhibitions will bring 800 books to the fair with plans to present them to the National Library. Meanwhile, the Chinese press and publication general office will bring over 2,000 titles.

Publishing associations from Southeast Asia will also have displays.

A special feature of this year’s fair will be the Thang Long-Hanoi display with maps, carved wood blocks, old books, the full text of King Ly Thai To’s decree to relocate the capital city to Hanoi, many artifacts and about 2,000 publications on Thang Long-Hanoi.

During the event, children can read books at the booths of Kim Dong Publishing House. There will be short talk and seminars with renowned writers such as Tran Dang Khoa, Ma Van Khang, Nguyen Xuan Khanh, Nguyen Nhat Anh, Phan Hon Nhien and Nguyen Vinh Phuc.

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Photo contest focuses on giving milk to poor kids

A photo contest named “Sua voi Tre tho” or Milk for Children aims to raise awareness about the importance of milk for growing kids.

The competition has been organized by “Vuon cao Viet Nam” fund of mik, Vietnam Dairy Products Joint Stock Co. (Vinamilk) and the Vietnam Children Patronage Foundation.

The organizing committee hopes that through the contest the community will join hands to give poor children a healthy chance to drink milk.

The contest is divided into two phases. In the first phase the judging panel will choose the best 40 photos to exhibit for review in November. Then six photographers will be selected for a charity trip with some celebrities and the fund ambassadors to deliver free milk to poor children. The photos of children and milk taken during trip will be judged to find the winner.  

The six finalists will receive certificates and six prizes including a VND15 million special prize with an added prize for the child subject of the picture, VND10 million for the first prize, VND5 million for the second prize and three third prizes worth VND3 million for each. There will be another prize for people whose vote for best photo posted on the official website agrees with the judge’s choice.

Contestants must register on www.vuoncaovietnam.com/Cuoc thi anh or send CD/ USB/ memory card/ photos to the media representative of “Vuon cao Viet Nam” fund in the North: T&A Ogilvy, Level 8, Tien Phong Building, 15 Ho Xuan Huong Street, Hanoi, tel: (04) 3822 3914, or email to Ms. Phan Phuong Linh at PhuongLinh.Phan@ogilvy.com or T&A Ogilvy at 72-74 Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street, District 3, HCMC, tel: 08 3821 9529 or email to Ms. Tran Duy Cung My at CungMy.Tran@ogilvy.com.

Deadline for entries is October 16.

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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Photo contest focuses on giving milk to poor kids

A photo contest named “Sua voi Tre tho” or Milk for Children aims to raise awareness about the importance of milk for growing kids.

The competition has been organized by “Vuon cao Viet Nam” fund of mik, Vietnam Dairy Products Joint Stock Co. (Vinamilk) and the Vietnam Children Patronage Foundation.

The organizing committee hopes that through the contest the community will join hands to give poor children a healthy chance to drink milk.

The contest is divided into two phases. In the first phase the judging panel will choose the best 40 photos to exhibit for review in November. Then six photographers will be selected for a charity trip with some celebrities and the fund ambassadors to deliver free milk to poor children. The photos of children and milk taken during trip will be judged to find the winner.  

The six finalists will receive certificates and six prizes including a VND15 million special prize with an added prize for the child subject of the picture, VND10 million for the first prize, VND5 million for the second prize and three third prizes worth VND3 million for each. There will be another prize for people whose vote for best photo posted on the official website agrees with the judge’s choice.

Contestants must register on www.vuoncaovietnam.com/Cuoc thi anh or send CD/ USB/ memory card/ photos to the media representative of “Vuon cao Viet Nam” fund in the North: T&A Ogilvy, Level 8, Tien Phong Building, 15 Ho Xuan Huong Street, Hanoi, tel: (04) 3822 3914, or email to Ms. Phan Phuong Linh at PhuongLinh.Phan@ogilvy.com or T&A Ogilvy at 72-74 Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street, District 3, HCMC, tel: 08 3821 9529 or email to Ms. Tran Duy Cung My at CungMy.Tran@ogilvy.com.

Deadline for entries is October 16.

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Korean wins piano contest in Hanoi

Contestant Luu Hong Quang performs at the international piano contest in Hanoi - Photo: VietnamPlus
Kim Kyung Hoon from the Republic of Korea collected first prize of US$2,000 in the open category of the International piano contest in Hanoi on Monday, reports VietnamPlus.

The Korean pianist also won a special prize from Vietnamese Music Association.

Vietnam did not bag any first prizes but won three seconds and two thirds at the competition, which was held in Vietnam for the first time from September 5-12. The award ceremony took place at Hanoi Opera House on Monday,

In the category for pianists aged 10-13, Vietnamese Do Hoang Linh Chi and Canada’s Vu Duc Manh Vincent picked up second prizes, each worth US$500.

The first prize in the category worth US1,000  went to Kiroki Ukine from Japan who also won best performance of Chopin music by a Japanese music organization.

Do Hoang Linh Chi also got Dang Thai Son Scholarship worth US$1,000.

In the category for 14-17 year-olds, Tran Viet Bao and Luu Duc Anh of Vietnam and Montesclaros Ma Regina from the Philippines won second prizes, each worth US$800.  Tran Viet Bao earned best Nocturne performance presented by the Vietnamese Musician Association.  Nguyen Le Binh Anh took third prize and was presented with a Dang Thai Son Scholarship.

In the open category, Vietnamese Luu Hong Quang and Shih Wei Chen from Taiwan won third prizes, worth US$800 each. Quang also received a Dang Thai Son Scholarship.

Vietnam puppetry wins golds

Vietnam took away two gold medals out of four in the team section of the second International Puppetry Festival, which wrapped up in Hanoi on September 9, reports the Vietnam News Agency.

The first gold went to the Thang Long Puppetry Theater troupe. Their show about the millennium celebrations in Hanoi had 10 acts featuring the working life of farmers, traditional customs and folk festivals. The second went to the Vietnam Puppetry Theater team for their interpretation of three stories by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen, including “The Brave Tin Soldier”, “The Ugly Duckling” and “The Little Mermaid”. It was the first time the theater has brought foreign literature to the water stage.

Singaporean and Indonesian troupes won the other two team gold medals.

The organizing board also presented 12 gold and seven silver prizes to the most outstanding artists and three prizes to the best directors.

The six-day festival, organized by the Department of Performing Arts under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, attracted 12 foreign troupes and five from Vietnam, including the Vietnam Puppetry Theater, the Thang Long Puppetry Theater and the puppetry troupes from Haiphong City, Daklak Province and HCMC.

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Operation Smile, Amway organize surgeries for kids

Doctors conduct checkups and screenings as part of the latest Operation Smile mission in HCMC - Photo: Quoc Hung
Operation Smile Vietnam on Monday started free medical checks for children with hare lips, cleft palate and facial deformities from HCMC and the Mekong Delta.

About 150 children will receive treatment during the NGO’s latest mission in HCMC that has been co-organized with Amway Vietnam and others.

Medical checks and screenings were held on Monday at National Hospital of Odonto – Stomatology (No. 201, Nguyen Tri Phuong St., Dist. 5), while surgeries start on Tuesday till September 17 at My Thien Hospital (No. 275/4/2 Ly Thuong Kiet St., Dist. 11).

This is the third consecutive year Amway Vietnam has participated in Operation Smile’s mission in Vietnam, as part of Amway’s global campaign for children called ‘One by One”. Amway Vietnam is also providing 30 volunteer staff and distributors to assist with the children and families’ transport, guidance and aftercare.

Looe Chee Seng, Amway Vietnam’s general director said, “We are very proud to accompany Operation Smile in the journey to bring smiles to the disadvantaged children. The participation of volunteers in Amway’s One by One activities is a key factor in raising awareness on social responsibility among the corporation and partners.”

In November, Amway Vietnam will continue its partnership role with Operation Smile in a similar surgery mission in Hue.

In Vietnam there are an estimated 13,000 children untreated for the condition because of financial difficulties, plus about 3,000 new cases born every year. According to statistics one in 500 babies born in Vietnam has the condition. The cost for a surgery by local medical specialists is approximately US$150. Following surgery children can speak, eat and drink properly, so they can integrate better into the community and schooling.

Amway Vietnam has contributed VND2.4 billion since 2008 to help 2,200 disadvantaged children in the country. It also partners with Hands of Hope to provide assistance to visually-impaired students at Nguyen Dinh Chieu School, Hanoi, and to poor handicapped children in Northern provinces.

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Asian film center-stage at first Vietnam film fest

Phillip Noyce
File photo of director and AiF ambassador Phillip Noyce, who will act as a judge at Vietnam's first international film festival next month
Photo: AFP

Asian cinema will take center-stage at Vietnam's first international film festival next month, the government says.

The festival, from October 17-21 will feature 30 works by Asian directors in three categories: feature film, documentary and short, said a statement received Tuesday from the Ministry of Culture's cinema department.

The event is being held as part of celebrations to mark Hanoi's 1,000th anniversary.

Entries in the juried festival were produced during the last two years and may have been shown already, but they must not have been broadcast on television or the Internet, the cinema department said.

Among the judges will be Australian Phillip Noyce, who directed "The Quiet American," a 2002 film adaptation of Graham Greene's novel set during Vietnam's war of liberation against France.

The statement said other judges include Vietnamese director Dang Nhat Minh, whose 2009 film "Don't Burn" dealt with the Vietnam War, Venice Film Festival director Marco Muller, and South Korean actress Kang Su-Yeon.

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Cartoon on legendary Hanoi founder to screen

cartoon
Photo: VNA

A cartoon on a legendary Emperor, who founded Thang Long capital, now Hanoi, is scheduled to air this Friday.

The film, entitled “Dragon’s Son”, is the first long cartoon using 3D technology in Vietnam, Nguyen Thi Hong Ngat, Executive Director of the Cinematography Association Studio said at a press briefing in Hanoi Monday.

The 90-minute footage is about the childhood of King Ly Thai To, or Ly Cong Uan at birth, who founded the 216-year-long Ly Dynasty in 1009.

Painters have animated over 30 characters, designed 20 major scenes and conducted almost 850 acts.

Director Pham Minh Tri said the “Dragon’s Son” is “100 percent Vietnamese”, from sounds to music and costumes. The cartoon is characterized by northern countryside sceneries such as banian trees, ferry stations, pagodas and buffalo boys playing and fishing.

Ly Cong Uan was born at Co Phap Pagoda, in the village of same name, Bac Ninh province, in 974.

At the age of 3, his mother took him to the pagoda for monks there to bring him up. He was named Ly Cong Uan by the monks and became a monk.

Under the protection and support of Ly Van Hanh, also known as Van Hanh monk, who was a respected monk in the holy Anterior Le Dynasty court, Uan came to the capital and took several promotions to the Left Guard-Commander of the Anterior Citadel, a high rank in the army system. In 1009, Le Ngoa Trieu, the last king of the Anterior Le Dynasty died under the wrath of the people because of the ferocity and cruelty brought on them in his time. Dao Cam Moc, a senior official, and Van Hanh monk used their power to enthrone Ly Cong Uan without any debate, beginning the Ly Dynasty.

The then capital Hoa Lu in the northern province of Ninh Binh was a tiny area with craggy geography bounded by mountain ranges, which had been suitable for a turbulent era but was not conducive to peacetime development and growth. Ly Thai To chose to move the capital to a broader area lying in the flat alluvial delta named Dai La, now Hanoi. In 1010, he began the move and while travelling from the former capital to the new land, he saw a Yellow Dragon ascending, so he changed the new land's name from Dai La to Thang Long.

Vietnam is celebrating the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi on October 10, which is called the Grand Festival.

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HCMC hotel set for annual German beer festival

beer
Oktoberfest at HCMC’s Windsor Plaza Hotel next month will offer fun, games, and massive quantities of German food and beer
Photo: Reuters

Oktoberfest at Ho Chi Minh City’s Windsor Plaza Hotel next month will as usual offer a week of music, German beers, and all-you-can-eat food.

Among the well-known German offerings at the festival meant for guzzling beer will be the premium Krombacher beer and Schneider Weisse wheat beer, sausages, meats and carvings, breads, pretzels, and a dozen desserts.

Also as usual, every guest will get a one-liter beer mug as a souvenir and have the chance to win a nightly lucky draw.

Bavarian music group Trenkwalder will return for a third time to perform traditional songs.

Guests can try their hand at traditional German games to test their strength and skills.

Last year the event attracted 10,000 participants who drank 15,000 liters of beer and more than four tons of food.

Tickets to the festival on October 8-10 and 13-16 start at VND600,000 (US$30.7).

Held for the first time in 1810, Oktoberfest attracts some six million international participants to Germany each year.

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Neolithic era cave was home to early humans

Artefacts: A scientist gathers stone objects found in Tham Choong Cave, which is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago). — VNA/VNS Photo Vu Quang Dan

Artefacts: A scientist gathers stone objects found in Tham Choong Cave, which is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago). — VNA/VNS Photo Vu Quang Dan

TUYEN QUANG — A cave in Na Hang District in the northern province of Tuyen Quang is thought to have housed primitive humans during the Neolithic Era (7,000-8,000 years ago).

Tuyen Quang Museum's director Quan Van Dung said that experts from the museum and the Viet Nam Archaeology Institute discovered primitive human artefacts in the cave, which is known as Tham Choong Cave to the locals.

The archaeologists discovered more than 1,000 stone objects, including tools for cutting, chopping and grinding. The tools were handmade with stones that had been retrieved from a riverbed.

The expert said the tools bore Hoa Binh cultural features (34,000 years ago and lasted till 2,000BC).

Archaeologist found tools made from animal bones, including a narrow tool with a sharp point.

The scientists at the site assumed that the tool was likely used to stitch their clothing that was made from tree bark. — VNS

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Gaming shops flout curfew

Game on: Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Tu

Game on: Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am. — VNA/VNS Photo Minh Tu

HA NOI — Internet shops in Ha Noi are flouting a new city regulation requiring them to close by 11pm, with many continuing to operate until 6am.

The rule, imposed on September 1, was aimed at reducing online game abuse among young people.

But Nguyen Hung, a student at the University of Technology and a self-confessed online game addict, said the hours after 11pm were "gold" for internet shops because many students rushed to them at night after finishing their studies for the day.

Hung said he often plays at a shop on Le Thanh Nghi Street in Hai Ba Trung District.

"It's a new school year, and many students from rural areas who come to study at universities in Ha Noi still have money to afford online games throughout the night," said Hung.

A shop owner who asked to have his name withheld said, "Despite the city's restriction, we try to keep our shop open to earn money."

The city has cut the main internet line to the shop, but the shop remains connected through shared network lines, he said, although the quality of the internet connection was lower, causing trouble for some gamers.

Many shop continue to operate without internet connections by offering offline games.

"These offline games are still entertaining," said Hung. "There's still blood and violence. Offline games are as dangerous as online games."

To get around the post-11pm ban, may shop use internet connections during the day and cut the line during the late hours to deal with any city inspectors.

Some internet shops have tried to find a loophole in the restriction by registering to change their form of business to a cafe – while continuing to providing oneline gaming.

For example, the Dat Shop on Giang Vo Road, which has been fined and urged to stop late night operations many times, has opened a cafe and provides free internet for customers who order a coffee.

Dat has also made this change since the new restriction bans internet shops and internet shops within a 200m radius of a school but not a cafe with internet.

An official from the Ha Noi Department of Information and Communications, Pham Quoc Ban, said they were confused as to how to deal with the problem. "But we'll tighten controls to prevent violent online games which have a highly negative effect on young people's behaviour and lifestyles."

Violations will be imposed with heavy fines and forced to be closed, Ban said.

The new regulation was also imposed in HCM City where 4,000 internet shops and over 1 million internet subscribers exist. — VNS

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Bao Viet, HSBC fund mobile school libraries in Danang

Pupils of Ngo May Elementary School in Danang read books of the mobile library. - Photo: Courtesy of HSBC
BaoViet Holdings Insurance Corporation and HSBC Vietnam have launched a VND1.5 billion mobile library project for primary pupils and disadvantaged youngsters in Danang City of Vietnam.

“Bearing in mind the local conditions, the mobile library project is highly effective in giving children access to reading materials which helps to improve individual literary and their educational achievement overall,” said Matthew Martin, chief technology and services officer and chairman of the corporate sustainability steering committee for HSBC Vietnam. 

Mobile libraries would visit 136 schools during the 2010 - 2011 school year. Around 58,000 students across eight districts in Danang City would benefit from the scheme. The project has been organized by Global Village Foundation in cooperation with Danang City’s Department of Education and Training.

A library containing 275 books on a variety of subjects, including Vietnamese literature, culture, reference, and fun reading material, would be delivered to each school reading hall for children aged to 12 from that area. Every semester, the library would rotate to other schools so that each school gets access to the four different sets of books over a two-year period.

“HSBC Vietnam is committed to investing in Vietnam’s most valuable asset – its children,” Martin said in a statement.

The mobile library program is a Global Village Foundation initiative that gives thousands of students and teachers a chance to appreciate the fun aspects and intellectual benefits of reading to improve the children’s aptitude and appetite for learning.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Bao Viet, HSBC fund mobile school libraries in Danang

Pupils of Ngo May Elementary School in Danang read books of the mobile library. - Photo: Courtesy of HSBC
BaoViet Holdings Insurance Corporation and HSBC Vietnam have launched a VND1.5 billion mobile library project for primary pupils and disadvantaged youngsters in Danang City of Vietnam.

“Bearing in mind the local conditions, the mobile library project is highly effective in giving children access to reading materials which helps to improve individual literary and their educational achievement overall,” said Matthew Martin, chief technology and services officer and chairman of the corporate sustainability steering committee for HSBC Vietnam. 

Mobile libraries would visit 136 schools during the 2010 - 2011 school year. Around 58,000 students across eight districts in Danang City would benefit from the scheme. The project has been organized by Global Village Foundation in cooperation with Danang City’s Department of Education and Training.

A library containing 275 books on a variety of subjects, including Vietnamese literature, culture, reference, and fun reading material, would be delivered to each school reading hall for children aged to 12 from that area. Every semester, the library would rotate to other schools so that each school gets access to the four different sets of books over a two-year period.

“HSBC Vietnam is committed to investing in Vietnam’s most valuable asset – its children,” Martin said in a statement.

The mobile library program is a Global Village Foundation initiative that gives thousands of students and teachers a chance to appreciate the fun aspects and intellectual benefits of reading to improve the children’s aptitude and appetite for learning.

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