Saturday, October 9, 2010

Food for thought

Le Nguyen

Local fare: Visitors sample banh cuon, one of the Vietnamese specialties presented at the Hanoian Food Festival at West Lake Water Park. — VNS Photo Le Nguyen

Local fare: Visitors sample banh cuon, one of the Vietnamese specialties presented at the Hanoian Food Festival at West Lake Water Park. — VNS Photo Le Nguyen

HA NOI — We eat to live, not live to eat, said French playwright Moliere, but given cultural and historical value associated with food, it could be argued we also eat to learn.

In the case of Ha Noi, which this week celebrates its 1,000th birthday, the city's rich history is reflected in its culinary traditions and wealth of dishes and delicacies.

For those who are hungry to learn more about Ha Noi, the city is holding a food fair at West Lake Park to mark its millennium.

There are more than 130 stalls featuring mainly Hanoian fare that will be open for the hungry until next Monday.

But foodies will face the perennial problem of how to sample as much as they want with the limited capacity of their inner chambers.

Walking from stall to stall just to have a look, I found a wide range from familiar bun (rice vermicelli) to strange dishes like fried crickets.

I had to be very selective so I would not regret the choices I made.

I first sampled banh duc (plain rice flan). For me, the white pasty pastry served with fried pork mixed with peziza, pepper and nuoc mam (fish sauce) looked a bit different and strange so I thought it was worth a try.

And I was right. The hot pastry, which was scooped into a small bowl, was so soft and fine it easily melted in my mouth.

"Making the pastry is a painstaking process," said chef Tran Van Khanh from the Holiday Ha Noi Hotel.

"It takes two hours of constantly stirring the rice flour at a steady pace in a thick pot on top of a small fire to ensure the pastry doesn't burn and curdle," he added.

Difficult as it is to make, the pastry is no more than a small snack that satiates hunger for only a short while.

"In the past, Hanoians made banh duc for their main meals to save rice in times of hunger," said the chef, "It became very common during the great starvation in 1945."

"It is best when served hot in the mornings during cold seasons," he added.

However, it's not easy for visitors to find the pastry in Ha Noi because it is only available in certain locations, said Nguyen Manh Cuong, 29, who lives on Dong Ngac Street.

The easy-to-eat snack afforded enough energy for me to continue my tour of the stalls.

For the main course, I stopped at a bun cha stall because the smell of the cha, (minced pork grilled) was so enticing.

"You can smell the aroma of the grilled pork from a great distance," said Doan Thi Thu, an octogenarian native of Ha Noi who lives on Bach Mai Street.

"Cooks have to fan the charcoal continuously to create a lot of smoke that consumes the pork," she said, "When it is served, the pork looks tender with melted fat marbled through the meat."

Although a big fan of bun chaû and having eaten it many times, Thu did not want to miss the chance to relive her childhood with bun cha served on a flat winnowing basket covered with la dong (phrynium leaves).

Bun (rice vermicelli), rau song (fresh vegetables), pork and fish sauce which make up bun cha are all staple ingredients of Vietnamese food.

"The fish sauce, after being mixed with vinegar, sugar, garlic and pepper, becomes a perfect sweet and sour accompaniment for bun cha," Thu said.

A cup of tao phoù, a popular Hanoian streetside drink which is made of tofu served with syrup and ice, is perfect for refreshment. It is cool and sweet.

"I hope Ha Noi will continue to serve lots of yummy food," said Australian John Kis, who has lived in Ha Noi for more than a year, noting that Hanoian food is pleasantly spicy and involves many fresh ingredients. — VNS

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Ha Noi basks in 1,000 years of glory

Ngoc Le

Showing the love: Two visitors don red headbands (left), while a young couple show their love of the city by wearing T-shirts printed with

Showing the love: A young couple show their love of the city by wearing T-shirts printed with "I Love Ha Noi".

HA NOI — Any visitor arriving in Ha Noi this past week was likely struck by the festive air, as if Tet (lunar new year) had arrived early.

But even Tet isn't comparable to the festivities this month in terms of scale and jubilation. Tet, after all, comes once a year, but this celebration is a once-in-a-millenium event.

A thousand years ago, King Ly Thai To relocated the capital from a hilly fortress region to the large flat land along the Red River, beginning an era in which the country flourished.

Since then, Ha Noi – then known as Thang Long, or the city of the rising dragon – has been almost continuously the capital of a thriving country.

"I've never seen the streets so beautiful and joyful like this before," said Nguyen Tien Thanh, 42, a resident of Hang Duong Street in the Old Quarter.

The Old Quarter is glorious, with a forest of flags, lanterns and banners along the streets and alleyways, a red glow enlivening an atmosphere already vivid with the array of colourful merchandise, the narrow, ageing homes, the motorbikes spilling onto the sidewalks and the streams of people. Even the cyclos look appealing, decorated with small flags bearing dragons of the Ly dynasty.

while Two visitors don red headbands

... while two visitors don red headbands. — VNA/VNS Photos Ngoc Ha and Thanh Tung

"I cleaned the facade and the balcony of my house to hoist the flag," said Thanh, a member of a four-generation family living together in the same house.

"At night, the streets are swarmed with people in beautiful clothes," he said, noting that the crowds were much bigger than during Tet.

Lots of Ha Noi residents want to show the world how much they love their city by wearing red bands around their heads that read "I love Ha Noi".

Ha Dong District's Nguyen Thi Thoan, 45, is one of them.

"People from Ha Noi naturally love the city," she said. "We have just 10 days to celebrate 1,000 years, so I don't want to miss them."

Hoan Kiem Lake is the focal point of all the festivities, its banks and the Tortoise Tower, The Huc Bridge and Ngoc Son Temple on the bank all colourfully illuminated, making the lake look like a sparkling jewel in the middle of the city.

Droves of revellers stream to the lake while the streets around it are closed to vehicular traffic every evening.

"A thousand years have gone by, and Ha Noi still maintains much of its antique elegance," said Pham Truong Giang, 22, a student of the University of Banking.

Giang was hanging around the lake with a group of classmates who all wore uniforms with slogans about Ha Noi.

"Its history since the reign of King Ly Cong Uan has been marked with heroic struggles against foreign invaders," Giang said. "Relics unearthed at the Thang Long Citadel testify to the talents of the Vietnamese people."

Huynh Kim Khanh, 67, who lives on Thai Ha Street and came to the lake with her children and grandchildren, said she wanted to show them the beauty and history of Ha Noi since her family members had been living abroad.

"The city has changed a lot," Khanh said. "In the past, we didn't have beautiful lighting like that."

Truong Thi Ngat, 55, and her two sisters had to travel all the way from Bac Ninh Province's Yen Phong District to see Ha Noi for themselves during its millennial anniversary.

"We will stay here until the celebrations are over, then we have to go home to harvest rice" she said, adding that this was her first visit to the capital city in 10 years.

Among foreign visitors to the city who were caught up in the festive atmosphere, Tobie Andersen, a Briton who works in Singapore, said he came to Ha Noi to visit his girlfriend's family and to "celebrate the birthday" of the city. He said that he felt a lot of energy in the celebration and that he has learned a lot about the city's history.

Apart from Hoan Kiem Lake, at scattered corners and intersections around the city, outdoor stages have been set up, and songs celebrating Ha Noi resound over loudspeakers in many neighbourhoods.

Thousands of visitors have flocked to Thang Long Citadel, which recently received a World Cultural Heritage designation, and the nearby excavation site to admire the treasured relics of past dynasties.

"I'm so proud of the depth of the nation's history," said Tran Phong, from the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta city of Can Tho.

The number of southern tourists to the capital has increased by 30 per cent compared to last month, said Tran Phi Nhan, deputy director of Viet Nam Travel, who led around 100 guests from HCM City to the citadel.

"They are eager to come to the capital on this occasion," he said. — VNS

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Prize recognises young artists

Young ambition: She by Le Hoang Bich Phuong, the only female in the final round of the contest.

Young ambition: She by Le Hoang Bich Phuong, the only female in the final round of the contest.

HA NOI — Eight artists are in the running for the Young Talent Prize 2010 award that is being organised by the Cultural Development and Exchange Fund (CDEF).

Members of the public will be able to vote for their favourite entrant by visiting www.cuocthitainang2010.com from October 10 to 31.

The short-listed paintings can be viewed on the website or at the Ha Noi Fine Arts College on October 18.

Organisers said the competition is designed to attract original, unique and creative artists.

The competition is held annually by the CDEF. In past years, the contest has varied its focus to include experimental music, modern dance and performance.

The eight short-listed artists are Dao Anh Viet, Luong Van Trung, Le Tran Anh Tuan, Nguyen Hong Phuong, Pham Tuan Tu, Le Hoang Bich Phuong, Nguyen Xuan Hoang and Nguyen The Hung.

The eventual winner will receive a grant of US$1,000 and be given the opportunity to exhibit his or her work.

This year, 165 artists entered the competition.

The eight finalists were selected for their aesthetic appeal, relevance, context and originality, according to the judges.

The CDEF also said that VND2,000,000 ($100) would be given to the best on-line comment on the winning entrant.

"The general observation of the works, which deal with life and social problems, show that young artists are now examining and reflecting upon not just the abstract but issues that are important to society. They are concerned about their own lives and the position of youth in the contemporary world," said Natasha Kraevski, a member of the judging panel. — VNS

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Vietnamese films screen at Busan Film Festival

HA NOI — Two Vietnamese films are screening at the Busan International Film Festival in South Korea this week.

Canh Dong Bat Tan (The Endless Field) by director Nguyen Phan Quang Binh will compete with 12 entries from eight countries and territories in the festival's New Currents category, while Bi, Dung So (Bi, Don't Be Afraid) by director Phan Dang Di will join the Asian Cinema Window programme.

The top two winners in the New Currents category will receive cash prizes of US$30,000 each.

Over 300 films from 67 countries and territories are being screened at the festival, of which over 100 are premieres, including Viet Nam's Canh Dong Bat Tan.

The screenplay of Bi, Dung So won a $10,000 award at the 2007 Busan Film Festival.

Malaysian businesses learn about Vietnamese culture

HCM CITY — Representatives from more than 100 Malaysian businesses celebrated the 1,000th anniversary of Thang Long-Ha Noi at a meeting held yesterday by the Malaysian Business Chamber (MBC).

The group enjoyed traditional Vietnamese cuisine, including spring rolls, chicken and corn soup and purple sticky rice in bean curd.

The chairwoman of MBC, Shimi Sumathi, who has worked in Viet Nam for 18 years, spoke highly of the country's cuisine as well as its history and people.

She said Malaysian businesses operating or wishing to invest in Viet Nam should learn more about the culture.

Old soldiers depict memories of war in HCM City exhibition

HCM CITY — An exhibition of art and posters painted by a group of 33 veteran soldiers opened on Thursday at HCM City Fine Arts Association.

About 59 recently made paintings using oil paints, water colours and lacquer on canvas, paper and other materials depict the veterans' memories of the war and their impressions of development in the city today.

The exhibition also has several brass sculptures of popular figures of Viet Nam's military like General Vo Nguyen Giap and Major General Tran Dai Nghia.

According to the association, the war veteran artist club has about 100 members, who were witnesses to the country's war for liberation and reunification. Members of the group also keep a lot of other war memorabilia.

The exhibition is at HCM City Fine Arts Association, 218A Pasteur District 3, HCM City.

Beer lovers drink up at HCM City's Oktoberfest

HCM CITY — The Windsor Plaza Hotel in HCM City's District 5 and the German Business Association are celebrating Oktoberfest with a seven-day party that opened at the hotel yesterday.

Also the 200th anniversary of the original beer fest, the bash is being held at the hotel's ballroom with Krombacher draught beer, Schneider Weisse beer, schnapps and typical German food like sausage, sauerkraut, pork knuckle and pretzel.

A German band, Trenkwalder, returns for the third year to play traditional songs.

Guests receive a beer mug as a souvenir and take part in traditional German games and lucky draws.

Admission to the seven-day event – until tomorrow and again from Wednesday to Saturday next week – is only for people aged 18 and over. — VNS

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Culture should be part of development: UNESCO

On the occasion of the recognition of Thang Long Citadel as World Heritage, Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO traveled to Vietnam to personally present the certificate and to attend celebrations for Thang Long-Hanoi’s 1,000th anniversary.

Tuoi Tre spoke to Ms. Irina Bokova about the preservation of cultural heritages and about UNESCO’s role in a quickly modernizing Vietnam.

As you have stated on the UNESCO website, you regret that culture is not one of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Why is that? And what, you think, is the role of cultural preservation in the future of Vietnam?

[The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are eight development goals that all UN member states and leading international organizations agreed should be reached by the year 2015. They include eradicating extreme poverty, reducing child mortality rates, fighting disease epidemics and developing a global partnership for development. Vietnam has shown an impressive progress in meeting most MDGs, with the most significant achievement being MDG #1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger]

As I have said many times, I believe that culture has a strong link to development and I will give you several examples. In terms of economic growth, culture in many countries creates revenues.

Here in Vietnam, tourism is based mostly on culture. I understood from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism that it accounts for 5.5 percent of the country’s GDP. Culture is also relevant to creative industry. If you add up the profits from creative industry like crafts, cultural events, and festivals to those of tourism they represent a quite substantial portion of GDP.

Vietnam is one of many examples of this which also applies to many other countries in the world including emerging powers and developing countries. I would say this is sheer economic reasoning.

People need knowledge as a solid basis to step on to integrate in this globalized and competitive world. People need to know where they come from, who they are and what are their national identities and histories.

I believe that any modern country needs it. Vietnam is a case in point with such an impressive and modern economic development and strong drive to enter the new technology and knowledge-based society of the 21st century.

At the same you are further encouraged to go into the future when you know who you are and are proud of your heritage.

Hence, I believe that preservation of tangible and intangible heritage is not the least factor in any country. You can’t only have, let’s say, education promoted without knowledge of the cultural specificity of a certain group or a certain nation.

Cultural diversity is an extremely important element of globalization. Without it we would all be heading towards inequality. I think the richness of cultural diversity is an extremely important element in any form of development.

For the first time during the MDGs debate in New York, there was an important side event on culture and development. I’m very happy that the language proposed to be incorporated in the outcome document of the General Assembly Session, includes a paragraph proposed by UNESCO with strong emphasis on the “close link between culture and development”. This happened for the first time. I’m very happy and proud that we could do that because we’ve worked for months to convince governments that this link is very strong.

You just returned from world heritage site Halong Bay. Based on your visit, what is your assessment of the protection and promotion of cultural heritage sites in Vietnam?

Halong Bay, of course, is a unique monument. You rarely encounter such a beautiful creation of nature.

I believe that the Vietnamese authorities I have met, the Provincial Deputy Governor and representatives from the UNESCO Heritage Site management team, are in constant contact with our World Heritage Center.

At the last meeting of the World Heritage Committee in Brasilia (of Brazil), there were still some questions around preservation and protection. I know that many things have been done; still, we discussed some remaining challenges which mainly, I believe, are linked to a huge amount of tourists visiting the site. It’s a perfect example of a UNESCO heritage site which becomes victim to its own success.

On the one hand, it is good that tourists are coming because it develops the local economy. Once again it is culture and development. It develops local industries. It creates jobs. People become more aware also of the monument.

On the other hand it creates environmental protection problems. So the most important thing that came out of today’s discussion with the authorities is that people recognize these challenges and UNESCO will continue helping to tackle some of them. I would say that the problem of how to reconcile preservation and modernity; especially when there’s a big inflow of tourists is a common problem in many parts of the world.

What lesson can Vietnam learn from the removal of Germany’s Dresden Elbe Valley from UNESCO’s World Heritage list last August?

Well, there it wasn’t that much lack of management or lack of protection of the site. It was rather the construction of the bridge which, according to the decision of the committee, changed and damaged the urban landscape.

It intruded, the committee explained. Because of the way it was built it changed the authentic character of the site. We have such cases also in other cities. So, one should be careful to preserve authenticity.

It doesn’t mean that UNESCO is against modern cities and modernization. The question is whether what you will build, be that a bridge or a road, destroys the authenticity of the site. If you decide to construct, make sure the authenticity is maintained. My advice is to consult the World Heritage Committee beforehand.

For example, I saw the new bridge in Halong Bay. There were some doubts in the beginning but I’m glad there was consultation on the design. The design of the bridge is very wise. It is almost transparent and doesn’t destroy the landscape. I think your government has done the right thing by consulting with the World Heritage Committee before the construction. This is very important.

As Vietnam becomes a middle income country how does UNESCO support Vietnam?

Supporting middle income countries is a big challenge for UNESCO. We need very specific policies and targets different from when we work in a developing country.

The underlining purpose and objective of the United Nation and UNESCO is twofold.

On one side, fast economic growth creates inequalities in societies and, I think, what we can do is to support the integration of marginalized groups who have difficulties in being competitive. Education is a perfect example.

We want to focus on those who are lagging behind so that they can also integrate in society and society, in turns, becomes more inclusive, more just and more coherent. We have seen that in many parts of the world, in Brazil, in India, in Argentina and many middle-income countries like Vietnam.

The second objective, I believe, is to help your country become competitive and integrate into the world economy. In other countries, we talk about education for all, but in Vietnam, we talk about quality education. In other countries we speak about dropout rates, but here about having solid secondary education, introducing sciences in education. We have engaged in a different level of cooperation.

What was your overall impression of your trip to Vietnam?

We traveled to Halong Bay by car. I think that Vietnam is a very impressive country in construction. You see it everywhere. It’s incredible, construction sites all over. I also saw many manufacturing sites.

I saw a lot of optimism and enthusiasm in the Vietnamese people and society.

I saw a strong commitment on the part of Ministers and Prime Minister. I have the feeling that they know what they want and where to lead the country and they are very much committed to do that.

I see a lot of energy in your people. I think you are living trough a sort of national renaissance, a kind of awakening and very quickly marching towards the future.

I commend what I saw here. It’s wonderful. I’m very impressed, really.

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Friday, October 8, 2010

AFL stars cycle Ha Giang for Australian cancer research

Ryan O’Keefe
An Australian football star from the AFL Sydney Swans team is leading a cycling tour in NorthernVietnam to raise money for Australian cancer research for kids.

Now that the football season is over, Ryan O’Keefe is leading a team of nine cyclists including former teammate Jared Crouch and Swan’s footballer Matthew Nicks on a 12-day cycling trek. The trek of northern Vietnam will raise money for the Australia-based Oncology Children’s Foundation (OCF).

By pedaling 50-75km a day on the steep roads of the Northern Highlands starting near Ha Giang, they hope to raise AU$50,000. The money will help fight the aggressive types of cancers that kill 200 Australian kids a year.

Since the end of last season, Swans star and OCF ambassador, O’Keefe, has become a father, won the award for club’s best and fairest, and played his 200th game for the club.

‘’This trip is going to be like my own tour, seeing a beautiful new country from a bike,’’ said O’Keefe, who is along for the trip but can’t cycle because of an injury.

Last night was their third night on the road. The team including a Vietnamese cycling guide was in a town called Dong Van near the Chinese border after a grueling day of hill climbs.

It is the third time that OCF has organized charity rides for cancer research in Vietnam.

The CEO of OCF, Ross Lewis, said the reason they came back to Vietnam again for the charity ride was because people were so keen to come here. The scenery is absolutely spectacular, very high mountain peaks, deep river gorges. A camera doesn’t do it justice,” said Lewis who is also cycling.

“We can see Vietnamese tilling their land on all types of steep slopes. You’ve got to admire them and the way they take care of their land.

“No one on the ride has seen anything like it before,” he said.

In related news, Vietnam’s own Swans team, the Vietnam Swans head off next week to play football in the Asian AFL Championships in Shanghai, China.

Over 350 Australian football players working in Asian countries will meet in Shanghai to play in the 12 team tournament on Saturday Oct 16.

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Dep Fashion Show rides the runway in Hanoi this month

Model Ngoc Oanh on the catwalk at Dep Fashion Show 8 in 2009 in HCMC - Photo: Kieu Giang
The ninth annual Dep (Beauty) Fashion Show (DFS9) organized by Dep magazine, Le Media and LeBros will be at the Garden Trade Center, My Dinh, Hanoi on October 31.

The Dreaming show will meld the dreams of individuals and society and represent the desire of each designer to end war, the economic crisis and social problems.

DFS9 will have four collections. Hoang Ngan will present her latest collection called “Dream” and Juliane Kunze from Germany will show her “Wandering” collection. “A story to tell” collection by Luu Anh Tuan from Hungary and “Utopia” by Dep show newcomer, Kelly Bui will also be showcased. A fashion factory will be open for public to see sketches of costumes and accessories prepared by the four designers. Plus a series of documentaries, “Together with DFS on Fansipan”, will show behind the scenes of DFS9 on VCTV1 channel at 9 p.m. every Friday.

DFS which started in 2004 is a fashion playground for professional Vietnamese and international designers and leading directors, choreographers, artists and models in Vietnam.

This year’s Dep Fashion Show will be produced by Le Nhu Thoa with general director Le Vu Long, musician DJ Tri Minh, supermodel Xuan Lan, lighting director Domique Raby and sound and effects advisor Jérôme Bréger. 

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Canadian scrawls essay on conical hats

Pointed prose: Steve Tait poses next to his unique contest entry, which was written on Vietnamese conical hats.

Pointed prose: Steve Tait poses next to his unique contest entry, which was written on Vietnamese conical hats.

HA NOI — Canadian Steven Tait created quite a stir when he was the only foreigner to enter a writing contest on the history and culture of Ha Noi, and to top it off his entry was written in his own hand on five conical hats.

"My country is 857 years younger than Ha Noi," said Tait, a Canadian, working and volunteering in the field of information technology. "I admire the capital and I feel very lucky to have lived and worked here.

"Because the city has existed for 1,000 years, I thought it a good reason to participate in the contest."

The contest was a joint effort by the Ha Noi People's Committee and the Ha Noi Moi (New Ha Noi) newspaper.

In order to answer 12 questions asked of contestants, Steve tapped all available sources, including the internet. He even called on his friends and colleagues, since some questions were rather difficult.

The more he studied about Viet Nam, the more interested he became, he said.

"I thought I would have to do something extraordinary with my entry, so it would express my admiration for the capital."

After many nights of pondering, Tait said it came in an epiphany how his work should be presented: on the non la (palm-leave conical hat) which is probably as old as Viet Nam itself.

"Conical hats and long traditional dresses are the specific characteristics we attribute to Vietnamese people. I feel inspired whenever I see a Vietnamese young lady wearing them."

Tait spent five hours a day writing his entry, a struggle because his knowledge of the Vietnamese language is minimal.

"I found it difficult to write on the hats because they are round and it required care and patience."

He also enclosed several images of Ha Noi to illustrate the text and make it more attractive.

One of Tait's colleagues, Nguyen Thi Phuong, said she was impressed with his work and the conical hat idea.

"Steve Tait is a foreigner, but he is very hard-working and always wants to learn more about Vietnamese people and culture. He always asks for help whenever there is something he doesn't know," Phuong said.

It is reported that this year's contest attracted over three million entries, aged between seven and, believe it or not, 100 years old.

Tait said he joined just for fun, so he was surprised when he heard his contribution had been singled out for special praise.

He said he also wanted to join the Viet Nam Idol singing contest.

"Let me check my schedule," he joked. —VNS

Bull-racing festival a huge hit in An Giang Province

AN GIANG — Thousands of people attended the annual Bay Nui (Seven Mountains) Bull-Racing Festival in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta province of An Giang on Tuesday.

This year's festival attracted more than 70 pairs of oxen from the districts of Tri Ton, Tinh Bien, Chau Thanh, Chau Phu and Thoai Son, Hon Dat and Kien Luong districts of Kien Giang Province, and Kirivong District in Cambodia's Takeo Province.

The three-day festival is a traditional ritual in which the Khmer ethnic minority celebrates the Dolta Ceremony to commemorate the merits of their ancestors and wish for happiness and peace for their souls.

Pop singers star in musical series ‘For Love' on VTV3

HCM CITY — The information and entertainment channel of Viet Nam Television (VTV3) last night aired the first part of a 36-part musical film TV series Cho Mot Tinh Yeu (For Love).

The film is produced by BHD Co, a private Vietnamese media company, and directed by Nguyen Tranh and Le Hoa.

Cho Mot Tinh Yeu is considered the first-ever Viet Nam TV series to feature such a high number of singers, including My Tam, Quang Dung, Tuan Hung, Tien Dat, Minh Thuan, and Minh Tu.

This is the first time singer My Tam has played a role in a film. She is also the music director for the film.

The film will be broadcast on VTV3 at 9pm every Thursday and Friday.

VNAT launches tourism television channel

HA NOI — The National Administration of Tourism and the Viet Nam Cable Television (VCTV) plan to launch the Tourism Television Channel to introduce Viet Nam tourism to the international community and raise awareness about the developing tourism industry.

The channel will be part of VCTV's cable television system and will broadcast nationally from 6am to midnight everyday on VCTV-TH channel beginning tomorrow.

Hang Da Market hosts Ha Noi photo exhibition

HA NOI — Visitors have been flocking to see old photos of Ha Noi dating from 1831-1954 that are on show at Hang Da Market's Commercial Centre in the city.

Entitled Memories of Old Ha Noi, there are thousands of photos of Ha Noi on show that reflect the fashion and lifestyles of a bygone era.

The photographs were collected by Doan Bac and Doan Thinh to celebrate the city's millennium.

The exhibition runs until next Thursday. — VNS

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Thursday, October 7, 2010

Distinguished Ngo Bao Chau shares his feelings about books

Ngo Bao Chau, the winner of the world’s top mathematics prize Fields Medal two months ago, talks about his special friends -- books.

Because of my work, I move a lot. Each time, it takes a few months before the new house becomes familiar. And I’ve noticed, time and time again, the special moment when a new house suddenly becomes a home: it’s when I unpack my books from the boxes and I arrange them on the shelves. As the books are being lifted out of the boxes to fill the shelves, I feel my past also leaping out and filling up the present.

I have quite a lot of books. Some I’ve read once, some many times, and some only a few pages. But I always know when a book goes missing. And it bothers me when someone borrows my books and forgets to return them, even though I must admit that I myself sometimes commit the same offense.

Among my books, the ones that I hold closest to my heart are the old books that have been bent out of shape by time. Like the one that I carried with me to India. Its pages were soaked and curled up by moisture, and forever lost their original shape. Or the one I left for a month atop the wooden desk on the fourth floor of my parents’ house in Hanoi (that house is always filled with sunshine). The color on the cover of that book has faded. Watching books fade with the passing of time gives me the same feeling as watching my parents, relatives, and friends growing older with each passing day.

I never write or highlight the pages of my books, just as I never want to paint my friends’ faces with dirt.
Time and space put limits on our life in the sense that each of us can only live one life and be in one place at a particular time.

But pages of books serve as windows that open us to new lives and outer worlds. And just like windows, they also let the sun shine through and into our own lives.

Thus, we read not only to satisfy our desire to know about the universe and life but we also read to nurture our desire for knowledge. When we find the answer to a question through a book, it will naturally generate two other questions and such questions will lead us to new books.

Of course, we can’t find all answers in books because real life is so much larger than books. There are things that books can’t teach us because there are things we can’t fully understand until we’ve crashed and burnt with them. And there are also things that are better communicated through speaking than writing.

But on the other hand, we can learn from books more than we think because there is so much that we cannot express in spoken words. Human relationships hinge on certain rules: we should not make life harder for others by imposing on them our own torments as our daily life is already tiring.

When we speak, we are imposing because the act of speaking demands immediate attention of the listener at that very moment. When we write, however, we let our readers choose their own time to communicate with us. Expressed at wrong times, the most heartfelt message can become inappropriate and lost. Books, however, give us the great advantage of being always stable over time.

Books are special friends who always come to us with an open heart. When we move, these friends accompany us. Forever they wait for us, on the shelves.

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Hue student promotes vegetarianism to save environment

“Go vegetarian for the environment” campaign kicked off last Wednesday in Hanoi and is set to launch in the rest of the country on October 10, to highlight how meat production contributes to global warming.

The campaign is spearheaded by Do Thi Thu Trang, a graduate student of environmental science at Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry in the central province of Thua Thien Hue, and sponsored by Live & Learn Vietnam, an environmental education-focused NGO involved in community development.

Tuoi Tre spoke to Do Thi Thu Trang who is also the president of Hue’s environmental club GREACT Hue.

What inspired you to launch this campaign?

When I was a sophomore at Hanoi National University, I wanted to conduct research on vegetarianism and the environment but could not for a number of reasons.

Later I attended the 2010 Vietnam Youth & Sustainable Development Summit organized by Live & Learn Vietnam and learnt about many youth-initiated activities around the world. I became motivated to do something meaningful. I did some research and presented my ideas to other summit participants. I was happy that many people liked my idea and wanted to join.

What difficulties did you encounter in realizing this campaign?

As I began, I realized that although the concept of “climate change” is very popular, many still do not understand its causes and effects. Many still think of melting glaciers as something that happens somewhere faraway. Some people believe that a vegetarian diet does not provide enough energy and nutrients. Above all, people’s eating habits are hard to change, but we’ll do our best to make a difference.

How do you carry out this campaign?

We use relevant websites such as vegvietnam.com and Facebook to get our message out. We set up booths at environment-related festivals and events to inform people about the campaign. Also, as part of the campaign, we encourage participants eating vegetarian food alone, in group, with friends, colleagues or family and whether at home or at vegetarian restaurants to illustrate their experience with a story, message or photo. We reward good stories or photos.

How do you rate the feasibility of the campaign?

This is a 5-month campaign. The purpose is to help people understand, adopt and maintain monthly vegetarian habits. We also want them to continue once the campaign is over. I believe that the campaign will reach a lot of people.

Currently many international campaigns are addressing climate change such as United Nations Environment Program’s Billion Tree campaign, Global Campaign for Climate Action’s TckTckTck project and the 350 campaign to keep carbon dioxide emission under safe limits.

2010 is the United Nation International Year of Youth and I think Vietnamese youth are ready to join young people of the world in their global efforts to prevent climate change.

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Opening of Hanoi Museum celebrates capital’s birthday

Hanoi Museum – with an impressive collection of 50,000 artistic and historical artifacts tracing the history of the country and its capital through several stages of its cultural development – opened Wednesday morning to coincide with 1,000th Thang Long-Hanoi anniversary.

Speaking at the ceremony, National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Phu Trong who cut the inaugural ribbon, referred to Hanoi as the cradle of Vietnamese culture with a history of thousand of years, beginning with Loa Thanh-Co Loa citadel 2,300 years ago.

“We must have a large museum to store and preserve both tangible and intangible cultural heritages of Thang Long–Hanoi and pass them on to the next Vietnamese generations,” he said.

“Failing to do so would be a disgrace.”

Occupying an area of 54,000 square meters, the 30.7 meter-high structure housing the museum was built in the shape of an inverted pyramid with total capital of over VND2,300 billion (US$118 million).

It is comprised of a two-storey basement and an additional four floors above-ground. A spiral walkway along the walls allows visitors a wider view of the facilities as they travel between floors.

Among its prized artifacts are a 2,000 years old bronze collection and a ceramic collection dating from the 11th-19th centuries including porcelain vases, candelabra, and flower pots.

Attesting to Vietnam’s ongoing diversity, cultural relics of various ethnic groups such as the Cham, Mong and Dao also are on display at the museum.

In addition to exhibits, the museum houses research facilities, restoration facilities, a library and functional rooms for meetings and workshops. The outside area is dedicated to an outdoor exhibition of Hanoian ornamental animals and plants.

The large cultural project with unique architecture, designed by Germany’s GMP International GmbH-Inros Lackner and the Vinaconex Corporation, is the largest and most modern of its kind in Vietnam.

Secretary of the Hanoi Party Committee Pham Quang Nghi, Chairman of the Hanoi People’s Committee Nguyen The Thao, Construction Minister Nguyen Hong Quan, Culture, Sports and Tourism Minister Hoang Tuan Anh, UNESCO representatives and several local officials and international guests attended the museum’s opening ceremony.

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Kites dance in a peaceful sky

Colours overhead: Participants fly kites during the festival. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

Colours overhead: Participants fly kites during the festival. — VNS Photo Truong Vi

HA NOI — Thousands of visitors flocked to My Dinh Stadium to watch as kites soared across the capital's skyline at the Ha Noi Kite Festival.

The event, which helped to celebrate the capital's millennium anniversary, wrapped up yesterday.

More than 124 kite flyers from the country's three regions, Vietnamese from abroad and foreigners participated in the event, said screenwriter Ngo Hong Tien from the Ha Noi Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

"The participants didn't compete with each other, they weren't trying to fly their kites higher than others. At this festival, they perform together to show off their kites' beauty," he said. "That's the reason why the festival was named Ha Noi-Peaceful Sky."

The participants were divided into different groups. The group of northern participants flew traditional kites from the region and played flutes which mimicked the sound of the kite's flying. Participants from the central region performed with kites that were shaped like butterflies, dragons, birds and phoenixes. The southerners flew sophisticated kites that required dozens of people to pilot them.

Participants from foreign countries gathered in a group to fly modern kites. American and Singaporean artists flew kites that could perform acrobatics and fight with other kites. The kites were controlled with four strings and must be piloted by an experienced kite flyer, said Scott Weider from the US, who has flown kites for 20 years.

Weider and three Singaporeans co-operated in harmony as they flew kites together for the first time at the festival.

With respect to Viet Nam and the US's past conflicts, Weider said that he relished in the opportunity to visit and participate in the peaceful festival in Viet Nam.

Under the artist's skilful hands, four kites flew through the sky as if they were dancing to music and at other times looked as if they were fighting each other.

Nguyen Thanh Huyen, 20, and her friends had queued in front of the stadium since the early morning to attend the performance.

"I'm very eager to see it," she said, "we all love to fly kites and have done so since childhood."

Huyen said she likes sport kites that are flown by kite flyers from the HCM City-based Blue Sky Club.

"It's wonderful, the kites look like dancers and athletes in the sky," she said.

Vice director of Ha Noi's Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Nguyen Khac Loi said this is an opportunity to introduce the refined hobby Vietnamese to the international community.

"Kites come from different regions and they represent those cultures," he said. — VNS

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Culture Vulture

Ly Quy Trung, owner of Pho 24, a successful southern restaurant chain model which has enjoyed success in both Ha Noi and abroad took part in the 11th European Foodservice Summit in Zurich, Switzerland, last month. It was the first time that Vietnamese cuisine had appeared at the event. Pho was also the only food on display to represent Asia at the summit.

Trung was interviewed by Thuy Pham.

Could you tell us about the event and how you became one of the 14 speakers there?

The event is held annually. The 11th European Foodservice Summit aimed to orientate and predict restaurant business development across the world. About 250 owners and general directors of restaurants along with members of the press attended the event. With the exception of speakers, all attendees had to pay a fee.

I was invited as one of the main speakers. I was the first Asian to ever speak at the event. The organisers had travelled to Viet Nam before to meet and interview me. After two interviews I received an official invitation. I know that they also surveyed a number of other regional countries.

Asia now has many big names in the restaurant industry but I don't think that interested the organisers. Restaurant chains that took part in the event were not big names but special, with unique methods and techniques that could be copied in most modern countries. I think that was why Pho 24 was chosen to take part in the event.

Vietnamese cuisine is an emerging market. Other cuisine like Chinese, Japanese and Thai are already well established and Vietnamese cuisine could be next.

Why is it ‘could be' not ‘sure'?

At present, more interest is starting to be shown in Vietnamese food. I say that for three reasons. Firstly, Vietnamese dishes are rich and nutritious. Secondly, we are in the Asia region which is a trendy part of the world. Finally, Viet Nam attracts a lot of attention in general, not just in cuisine.

However, we need the right strategy and investment in order for Vietnamese cuisine to become fully recognised. For example, cuisine should be developed as a national brand. Support from the State is also necessary in the fields of information, tax and licensing.

I know that many Vietnamese want to develop their restaurant chains abroad. I'm ready to share my experience with others. We need to be unified in our push for recognition. It would take a long time to do it all as individuals. Support from the State would increase progress.

Could you tell us something about your success with the development of Pho 24?

Fast-food chains like KFC appeared in Viet Nam in 1993. It now has 70 restaurants and Lotteria has 59. Since 2003, Pho 24 has opened 60 restaurants including 17 abroad. Pho 24 is growing rapidly.

Pho 24 is the first Vietnamese restaurant chain to operate to international standards. It means that the cooking procedures are standardised on paper. Normally, traditional pho restaurants depend on the individual chef's tastes.

The success of Pho 24 proves that popular Vietnamese dishes can be a success in restaurants around the world.

Many people are afraid of that traditional pho will lose its uniqueness through modernisation and the need to conform to international standards. What do you think?

I don't think so. Our food is prepared in line with these standards but the taste is still one hundred per cent Vietnamese.

Pho 24 restaurants are equipped with air-conditioning but we still use chopsticks. Pho 24 is cooked with traditional steps but in a more hygienic way. Pho eaters have more choices. Overseas Vietnamese like to enjoy traditional dishes that remind them of home.

Pho is very popular. Does that present any negative points?

The biggest challenge is that everybody can cook pho and think theirs is the best. But to make the good taste of pho is not simple. When I opened Pho 24 in Ha Noi, many people don't believe pho Sai Gon would be accepted in Ha Noi.

Hanoians came to Pho 24 out of curiosity. At that time, pho Ha Noi was sold for just a few thousand dong while Pho 24 cost at least 24,000 dong. Some people liked it and some people didn't. I understand that Hanoians want to try something from the south but I didn't know how to get them to keep coming back.

Hygiene and good service are strong points of Pho 24. Pho 24 is not as sweet as pho Sai Gon and does not have as much monosodium glutamate as pho Ha Noi.

Pho 24 restaurants in Ha Noi are much more crowded than in HCM City. If Pho 24 was cooked in the style of Ha Noi, it would not be successful. Delicious is an abstract concept. It depends on habits which can change. — VNS

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Historian traces Ha Noi's food culture

HCM CITY — Ha Noi is know for its unique cuisine, says historian Nguyen Nha, whose 200-page culinary history of Ha Noi was published yesterday as part of the celebrations of the capital city's 1,000th anniversary.

With support from other historians and cultural experts, Doc Dao Am Thuc Thang Long-Ha Noi (Unique Cuisine of Thang Long-Ha Noi) introduces about 400 dishes, both popular favourites and others which have nearly disappeared from local menus.

"I am on the way to tracing and preserving Vietnamese cultural values which are in danger of being buried in oblivion," Nha said. "I hope my project helps to preserve and introduce recipes of Ha Noi which are the pride of Hanoians and of the Vietnamese people."

The historian is planning additional volumes about the cuisine of Hue and Sai Gon.

After reading the book, Prof Tran Van Khe, who said he first came to Ha Noi in 1938 and has visited every year since 1976, confessed that it taught him much he didn't know about the special dishes of Ha Noi.

"The recipes are the cultural heritage of the Vietnamese." said Khe. Preserving them was as important as preserving traditional forms of music or water puppetry, he added.

Nha began teaching at the HCM City Teachers College in 1992 and began using his own money to travel to Ha Noi to record images about the city for use as teaching materials. The effort resulted in a documentary about the capital city, which he completed several years ago.

"Several historical sites in Ha Noi disappeared after I shot the film," Nha said, noting that the video would soon be screened in Ha Noi schools. — VNS

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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Phuong Nam Cultural Corporation book fair opens in HCMC

More than 4,000 foreign publications, mostly of medicine and economics, are on display at selected city locations as part of Phuong Nam Cultural (PNC) Corporation’s book fair that opened in Ho Chi Minh City Tuesday.

McGraw-Hill publishing house’s selection include marketing, finance-credit, business administration, foreign trade, and accounting publications with popular titles such as “Strategic Bond Investor: Strategies and Tools to Unlock the Power of the Bond Market”, “Appreciative Leadership”, “Bond Portfolio Investing and Risk Management”, “Carrots and Sticks Don't Work”, “Competitive Selling: Out-Plan, Out-Think, and Out-Sell to Win Every Time”, and “Everything I Know about Marketing I Learned From Google”.

They are on shelf on the second floor of Saigon Center, 65 Le Loi Street, District 1.

The event also showcases 2,000 new medical reference publications from various publishing houses like Elsevier, Lippincott and McGraw Hill including Harrison's “Nephrology and Acid-Base Disorders”, Rutherford's “Vascular Surgery”, Williams’s “Hematology” and, Ferri's “Fast Facts in Dermatology”.

Medical titles are on display at the bookstore of the HCMC Medicine and Pharmacy University.

The book fair, which PNC hopes to organize twice every quarter, offers discounts of 10-50 percent.

The fair ends on October 15.

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Vietnam TV all set for 1st travel channel

Vietnam Television will launch its first travel channel on VCTV-TH, its cable network this week in cooperation with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

VCTV-TH, to be broadcast from 6am to midnight, hopes to educate the public about the nation’s history and culture, conservation of nature, and tourism development, and attract investments in these fields.

It will have local and international content.

A 30-minute travel news capsule will initially be broadcast thrice a week before becoming a daily feature.

There will be only seven other shows daily, introducing various tourist destinations in Vietnam.

“Vietnam in Me” (Vietnam trong toi) will focus on the culture, history, geography, and characteristics of various regions.

“Bamboo Sticks” (Dua tre) will feature journeys to discover the cuisines of various lands.

“Weekend Destination” (Diem den cuoi tuan) will take viewers to the country’s most beautiful landscapes.

The channel has plans to broadcast overseas to foreign audiences in future, Nguyen Manh Cuong, deputy director of the General Department of Tourism, said.

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Japanese film week promises exciting fare

Akira Kurosawa’s “Rashomon” will be among eight films to be screened at a Japan film week to be held in Ho Chi Minh City and Nha Trang this month.

The movie, which has become a cult classic since being released in 1951, is about the rape of a woman (Machiko Kyo) and the murder of a man (Masayuki Mori), possibly by a bandit (Toshiro Mifune).

At Kyoto's crumbling Rashomon gate, several people shelter from a storm and discuss the crime which has shocked the region.

It won the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar in 1951 and the won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1952.

The other films to be screened are “Happy Flight”, “Tony Takitani”, “Kamikaze Girls”, “Sansho the Bailiff”, the cartoon “5 Centimeters Per Second”, “Yunagi City, Sakura Country” and “Memories of Tomorrow”.

The program is sponsored by the Japanese consulate in HCMC and the Japan Foundation.

“It will provide an opportunity for people to further understand the Japanese land, people, culture and society, from traditional to modern, through films,” the consulate said in a release.

The films will be shown from October 8 to 14 at BHD Star Cinema in HCMC’s district 10 and from 22nd to 24th at Hoang Hoa Tham cinema in Nha Trang.

Free tickets are available at the consulate in Nguyen Hue Street, HCMC, and the venue in Nha Trang.

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Hanoi’s forward-looking architecture seeks its glorious past

Architects, city planners, researchers and art historians brainstormed and envisioned the city’s new planning and renovation direction at an international architecture seminar themed "1,000 years of Thang Long-Ha Noi: Architecture Hallmarks Overtime" hosted by The Vietnam Architecture Association on October 2 in Hanoi.

The seminar aimed at exploring Hanoi’s rich and diverse architectural heritage and understanding its uniqueness as the city’s thriving and modernizing energy comes to life daily against a backdrop of ancient, colonial, neoclassic and contemporary architecture.

Attendees strived to unearth the key to the city’s current charm amidst all of its contradictions while critically looking at past planning mistakes or shortsightedness both during colonial rule and throughout more recent administrations.

Colonial authorities were particularly insolent and showed extreme disregard to the city’s architectural and cultural history which preceded them. They destroyed old citadels and relics in the center of Thang Long in the 19th century as they set on building a new administrative center.

Just as the city’s colonial administrative center was built on the foundations of Bao An ancient pagoda, Saint Joseph Cathedral was built on the foundations of Bao Thien Tower.

They also filled in the To Lich River and a series of lakes from the city’s north to the south to build a new urban center seriously offsetting the ecological balance and limiting the city’s natural drainage capacity.

More recent administrations, first faced by the tragedy of war then overwhelmed by the task of rebuilding the country, neglected some colonial architectural treasures between 1954s to the middle of 1980s causing them to suffer environmental degradation some of which irreversible.

Some colonial villas gave way to more practical infrastructure as the administration had to meet the needs a ten-fold increase of the urban population following the rural-urban exodus and a redesigned national landscape.

The new government also built a series of new uniformly-designed residential areas such as Kim Lien, Trung Tu, Giang Vo, Thanh Cong, Thanh Xuan, Nghia Do and Dong Xa which ultimately proved inconsistent with effective city planning and were considered esthetically unappealing.

A recent boom of plot-split front houses robbed the capital’s most charming streets of their character.

Skyrocketing real estate values began changing the very identities of communities in once more traditional neighborhoods as homes became financially prohibitory to many of their members.

Moreover, the construction boom the city is experiencing and the sprouting of high-rise apartment buildings is not only raising concerns for infrastructure overload, traffic jams, and increased flooding risks, but also causing Hanoi’s new urban landscape to resemble that of Seoul, Bejing and Singapore.

“In spite of historically detrimental policies and irresponsible decisions due to limited knowledge or unsustainable development practices, Hanoi is still beautiful”, Vietnam-born architect Nguyen Chi Tam, who was raised in Paris, said, as he returned to Vietnam to explore his origins.

He believes that Hanoi should follow an eco-friendly and esthetically conscious urban redevelopment path and architects should be involved in the urban planning process. Xenophilous tendencies which motivated some of Hanoi’s architectural decisions caused it to lose its soul. Tokyo’s architecture deprived of cultural identity should be a lesson learnt.

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Hanoi’s forward-looking architecture seeks its glorious past

Architects, city planners, researchers and art historians brainstormed and envisioned the city’s new planning and renovation direction at an international architecture seminar themed "1,000 years of Thang Long-Ha Noi: Architecture Hallmarks Overtime" hosted by The Vietnam Architecture Association on October 2 in Hanoi.

The seminar aimed at exploring Hanoi’s rich and diverse architectural heritage and understanding its uniqueness as the city’s thriving and modernizing energy comes to life daily against a backdrop of ancient, colonial, neoclassic and contemporary architecture.

Attendees strived to unearth the key to the city’s current charm amidst all of its contradictions while critically looking at past planning mistakes or shortsightedness both during colonial rule and throughout more recent administrations.

Colonial authorities were particularly insolent and showed extreme disregard to the city’s architectural and cultural history which preceded them. They destroyed old citadels and relics in the center of Thang Long in the 19th century as they set on building a new administrative center.

Just as the city’s colonial administrative center was built on the foundations of Bao An ancient pagoda, Saint Joseph Cathedral was built on the foundations of Bao Thien Tower.

They also filled in the To Lich River and a series of lakes from the city’s north to the south to build a new urban center seriously offsetting the ecological balance and limiting the city’s natural drainage capacity.

More recent administrations, first faced by the tragedy of war then overwhelmed by the task of rebuilding the country, neglected some colonial architectural treasures between 1954s to the middle of 1980s causing them to suffer environmental degradation some of which irreversible.

Some colonial villas gave way to more practical infrastructure as the administration had to meet the needs a ten-fold increase of the urban population following the rural-urban exodus and a redesigned national landscape.

The new government also built a series of new uniformly-designed residential areas such as Kim Lien, Trung Tu, Giang Vo, Thanh Cong, Thanh Xuan, Nghia Do and Dong Xa which ultimately proved inconsistent with effective city planning and were considered esthetically unappealing.

A recent boom of plot-split front houses robbed the capital’s most charming streets of their character.

Skyrocketing real estate values began changing the very identities of communities in once more traditional neighborhoods as homes became financially prohibitory to many of their members.

Moreover, the construction boom the city is experiencing and the sprouting of high-rise apartment buildings is not only raising concerns for infrastructure overload, traffic jams, and increased flooding risks, but also causing Hanoi’s new urban landscape to resemble that of Seoul, Bejing and Singapore.

“In spite of historically detrimental policies and irresponsible decisions due to limited knowledge or unsustainable development practices, Hanoi is still beautiful”, Vietnam-born architect Nguyen Chi Tam, who was raised in Paris, said, as he returned to Vietnam to explore his origins.

He believes that Hanoi should follow an eco-friendly and esthetically conscious urban redevelopment path and architects should be involved in the urban planning process. Xenophilous tendencies which motivated some of Hanoi’s architectural decisions caused it to lose its soul. Tokyo’s architecture deprived of cultural identity should be a lesson learnt.

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Revellers enjoy the capital city by night

by Ha Nguyen

LIght show: Thap Rua (Turtle Tower) is more sparkling and fanciful these day to welcome the city's 1,000th anniversary. — VNA/VNS Photo Doan Tung

Light show: Thap Rua (Turtle Tower) is more sparkling and fanciful these day to welcome the city's 1,000th anniversary. — VNA/VNS Photo Doan Tung

The clock is continuing to count down to the grand ceremony for Ha Noi's 1,000th anniversary on October 10, and the city is bustling with animation, colourful lights and symbols of the city's history.

Many people in Ha Noi want to soak up the rare atmosphere of the celebration and capture memories of the event in their photos, while others are rediscovering their love for the city by wandering around it by night.

"Hoan Kiem Lake is sparkling with LED lights, and the Turtle Tower is more fanciful during the night," said Ha Huu Vu from Ha Noi's Hai Ba Trung District. Vu and his friends made a tour through a night in the capital city on Saturday.

Vu's friend Quoc Viet sat on a stool drinking iced tea from a sidewalk tea vendor and talking with others, a long-standing pleasure of Ha Noi.

"Sitting on the sidewalk and talking to your friends is a young person's pleasure, too," said Viet. "I like to sit here and enjoy the city life and the simple sounds of the local people."

Vu's other friends Quang Thang and Dinh Hung decided to join a music night that praised Ha Noi through 40 well-known singers of the revolutionary music.

" Although hearing time and again, we are still interested in songs about Ha Noi's history and its profound beauty as well as the elegant lifestyle of the capital's residents," said Thang.

Meanwhile their other friend Huy Hung led a group of five to the Long Bien Bridge, which has long become a symbol of the city and has been lit up like a dragon across the Hong (Red) River. At night, drink and snack vendors set up shop along the length of the bridge.

"When we arrived, a crowd of people was already there enjoying the river even though it was 1am," said Hung.

At 2am, Vu and his friends returned to the inner city to eat nem chua ran (fried fermented-pork) and hot bun rieu cua (spicy noodles with crayfish) on Tong Duy Tan Street, which also known as "Food Street". The street was also bustling at this late hour, with people jostling to park their motorbikes and piling into shops for the delicious dishes.

Continuing their night odyssey, Vu's group drove their motorbikes past Tran Vu Temple near West Lake and then on to the ancient citadel of Hoang Thanh at the intersection of Phan Dinh Phung and Nguyen Tri Phuong streets. They also drove up O Quan Chuong, Cua Nam and Cua Bac streets.

"We are really impressed by the light decorations on Dien Bien Phu Street which represent 1,000 years of the nation's civilisation, with images of harps, bronze drums and the bamboo of Saint Giong, down to the time of Ho Chi Minh and a capital city of peace, with pigeons flying," said Vu. — VNS

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