Saturday, January 15, 2011

Culture, sport need specialists

HCM CITY — The culture, sports, and tourism sector is unable to find enough quality personnel, according to officials.

Nguyen Thanh Rum, director of the HCM City Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism blamed it on a lack of incentives for specialists and talented people.

A severe shortage of skilled specialists who can train the next generations is also to blame, he said.

As a result, most fresh graduates fail to meet the job market's requirements, Ngo Quang Vinh, director of the Da Nang Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, said.

"Schools fail to factor the needs of employers into their training programmes," he told a conference held in HCM City this week to gather suggestions for drafting regulations to develop the workforce in this decade.

The poor teaching methods and low investment in infrastructure and equipment are also causes for the poor education quality, he said.

Amending regulations and policies will be a major breakthrough in developing the workforce, he said, adding that the draft should spell out incentives to attract talent.

Together, sports, culture, and tourism sector employ around 1.62 million people of whom doctoral and master's degree-holders account for just 0.2 and 2.07 per cent, respectively, Nguyen Van Luu, deputy director of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism's Training Department, said.

Graduates accounted for 36.58 per cent and vocational training graduates for 26.23 per cent, he said.

Some 435 schools and 1,000 vocational training centres around the country offer courses in culture, sports, and tourism that are attended by 26,000-30,500 students every year, he said.

But only 26.5 per cent of the 3,112 lecturers and teachers at these establishments have master's degrees, while 4.6 per cent have doctoral degrees.

Up to 30 per cent of all graduates fail to find suitable jobs or are unemployed, he added.

The ministry hopes to add 30 doctorates to the teaching staff every year through 2015, and 50 during 2016-20. — VNS

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Friday, January 14, 2011

HCMC to host book road fest during Tet

Ho Chi Minh City will organize the first-ever Book Road Festival to celebrate the New Year of the Cat from January 31 to February 3, according to the city’s Department of Information and Communications.

Visitors could view a wide range of books on display along the Mac Thi Buoi Street, near the Nguyen Hue flower road in district 1.

Exhibitions featuring new and bestselling books, calligraphy demonstration, and Q&A session with the authors will be organized.

The organizers including local publishing houses, book distribution companies and private bookstores will also showcase a special display area dedicated to children books.

Festival-goers will have a chance to witness antique, valuable and rare books like “Technique du peuple Annamite, “Hoang Trieu Ngoc Diep”, “Hoang Tu Pho”, “Hoang nu pho”, “Hoang Trieu Ton Pho tien bien”, and “Gia Dinh bao”.

The fest is expected to encourage a reading culture and promote the city’s tourism to local and international visitors.

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Longest Tet break creates the perfect holiday season

by Ha Nguyen

Pristine beach: Hon Thom on Phu Quoc Island in the southern province of Kien Giang attracts thousands of tourists a year. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vu.

Pristine beach: Hon Thom on Phu Quoc Island in the southern province of Kien Giang attracts thousands of tourists a year. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Vu.

Spring season: Visitors enjoy colourful flowers on a bank of Xuan Huong Lake in the Central Highlands city of Da Lat. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Ha

Spring season: Visitors enjoy colourful flowers on a bank of Xuan Huong Lake in the Central Highlands city of Da Lat. — VNA/VNS Photo Thanh Ha

Viet Nam's first eight day Tet ( Lunar New Year) holiday has created favourable conditions for local and overseas Vietnamese to enjoy the longest Tet, starting on February 3.

An increasing number of well-off Vietnamese have chosen to celebrate Tet abroad. That trend is expected to continue this Lunar New Year.

Popular destinations abroad at this time of year when the weather is cool or cold in much of the country are Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, South Korea and Hong Kong – where the weather is more inviting. Meanwhile, those with relations abroad often take the opportunity afforded by the long annual holiday to visit family and friends in the US, Australia and Europe.

My Hanh, who works for a foreign firm in Viet Nam, said her four-member family plans to enjoy Tet in Thailand.

"My two daughters and I are shopping addicts so we are very much looking forward to going to Thailand. We plan to spend all day and night shopping during our four days in the country," Hanh said, adding that celebrating Tet abroad offers a welcome escape from domestic chores.

Hanh said that when she celebrates Tet here in Ha Noi she has to spend days shopping for food in overcrowded markets.

"I have to work very hard and it's exhausting. This Tet will be different. Apart from being able to shop for clothes, I will have time to relax and read books, which I adore doing," she said.

She said "I've already asked my mother-in-law to help me prepare traditional dishes to worship our ancestors for the last evening of the old lunar year and the first day of the new year," Hanh said.

Meanwhile, Hoang Quan, who lives in Ha Noi's Tu Liem District, has booked a holiday in Japan where his daughter is studying.

"I had to book a five-day tour to Tokyo at the start of this month to be sure of being able to get tickets in the run-up to Tet," Quan said.

"My wife is a pagoda goer so it's a good chance for her to explore and see how things differ in Japan," Quan said.

Despite being relatively well off, he still worries about hefty shopping bills.

"It doesn't matter. We will spend our time shopping at the Japanese yen 100-per-item shops."

Duong Quang Phong and his family from Los Angeles plan to return to Viet Nam for Tet.

Phong said he had already booked a seven-day tour to Phu Quoc Island beginning on the second day of the Lunar New Year.

"Our six-member family will celebrate Tet on the island by ordering banh chung (square sticky rice cake) and many other traditional specialities such as nem ran (fried meat roll), dua hanh (pickled welsh onion) and canh mang (bamboo shoots cooked with pig's trotters). We've rarely tasted these dishes since we settled in the US in the 80s.

"Spring tours over Tet will be more comfortable and interesting because tourism sites will not be as crowded as during the peak season in summer. The cool weather in the south will make our tour more enjoyable. We are looking forward to exploring the island's natural beauty, as well as relaxing," Phong said.

Like Phong, other overseas Vietnamese plan to return to Viet Nam for the holiday. Most have booked tours to popular destinations such as Ha Long Bay, Sa Pa, Ninh Binh, Da Nang, Nha Trang, Da Lat, Hue, and Hoi An, said Nguyen Cong Hoan, deputy director of Ha Noi Redtour.

"Despite the fact that prices are 5-10 per cent more this Tet compared with last year, almost of our tours have been fully booked," he said.

To meet increasing Tet demand, Viettravel, Fiditour and Ben Thanh Tourist have put on extra tours from the 28th and 29th of the 12th lunar month until the 4th of Lunar New Year.

Saigontourist is expecting 15,000 visitors, an increase of 15 per cent compared with last year, a company manager said.

But Hoan warned that holiday-makers should be wary of unlicensed tour operators. He said they were typically 20-25 per cent cheaper than those offered by mainstream operators, but that standards were suspect.

"Some of them have even tried to ‘resell' their customers to other tour operators for a profit," Hoan said.

Last year, the country's tourism sector welcomed 5 million foreign travellers and 28 million local guests. — VNS

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Porcelain maker shows off

by Le Hung Vong

Rhymes with gauze: Porcelian vases by Minh Long No 1 are displayed at the HCM City showroom. — VNS Photo Ngoc Hai.

Rhymes with gauze: Porcelian vases by Minh Long No 1 are displayed at the HCM City showroom. — VNS Photo Ngoc Hai.

HCM CITY—Viet Nam's leading fine porcelain maker Minh Long No 1 yesterday opened a new showroom in HCM City that displays exclusive products it has made over the last five years.
The 600sq.m showroom at the Minh Long Tower Building on 17 Ba Huyen Thanh Quan Street in HCM City's District 3 displays more than 2,000 porcelain wares includings bowls, dishes, teapots, jewellery, artworks and souvenirs.

The showroom also showcases national souvenirs chosen as gifts to foreign heads of State by the Vietnamese Government.

Also on display are exquisite and exclusive artistic works of which there are fewer than five copies each.

Ly Ngoc Minh, general director of the Binh Duong Province-based porcelain producer, said at the opening ceremony that each artisan was able to make only one to three copies of these works per year.

While porcelain industries in other countries bake their coloured works at 850OC, Minh Long No 1 employs a technique that does it at 1,250OC, he said.

"This high temperature helps to keep the colour on porcelain unchanged and renders details of the painting," said Minh.

Minh Long has produced fewer than 200 porcelain works of this type in the past five years, with fewer than 10 copies of each work. Some of them were single pieces.

The works cost between VND40 million (US$2,000) and 300 million ($15,000) a piece, Minh said.

"We're not targeting any profit from this series of Minh Long products. We want to show that we can do, and do even better, what other porcelain makers around the world produce," he added.

As an indication of the care that is taken in making these products, the company has been unable to fulfil orders submitted for these works during a three-day promotion more than two years ago.

"These artistic works are the pride of not only Minh Long No 1, but also of Binh Duong Province's porcelain industry as well," he said.

Family tradition

Minh Long No 1 was founded in 1970 by Minh, whose family had been involved with the ceramic trade for generations.

Combining his passion for porcelain with the knowledge and experience of his ancestors, Minh dedicated his life to studying firing techniques and composition and spending time designing a unique style for Minh Long's products.

The company, which has a 120,000sq.m factory in Binh Duong's Thuan An District, is the first company in the country's porcelain industry to use a gas-fueled kiln for its production lines.

Minh Long's porcelain products, which have won over many connoisseurs and discriminating buyers, have been exported to the US, Europe and other Asian countries. — VNS

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Viet Nam's first 3-D flick among new Tet releases

by Thu Anh

Jumping off: The poster of Bong Ma Hoc Duong, the country's first 3D-film, produced by Thien Ngan Studios. — VNS Photo

Jumping off: The poster of Bong Ma Hoc Duong, the country's first 3D-film, produced by Thien Ngan Studios. — VNS Photo

HCM CITY — As usual, a slew of films are ready for release during the Tet (Lunar New Year) holidays, including Viet Nam's first 3-D flick, and studios are hoping to part young moviegoers and their money.

Thien Ngan (Galaxy) Studios, one of the country's biggest, believes its 3-D movie Bong Ma Hoc Duong (Ghost at School) will be a hit and a step forward for the entire industry.

To make sure nothing goes wrong, it spent a packet on hiring Hollywood cinematographer Joel Spezeski.

"Our film's post-production was done in Hong Kong," its director Le Bao Trung, who learnt 3-D film-making in Hong Kong before beginning the project, said.

Promising lively sound and light effects throughout, he hoped the film will encourage more Vietnamese filmmakers to make 3-D films.

Ghost at School is a comic horror film about an online thriller writer who is haunted by a bunch of young people's ghosts.

The US$1 million production stars dozens of young pop stars and fashion models like Wanbi Tuan Anh, Truong Quynh Anh, and Dinh Ngoc Diep.

But its explicit scenes have already become a lightning rod for criticism by critics and educators who are anxious about the effects on young audiences after viewing its trailer online.

"I don't think Bong Ma Hoc Duong with its sexy scenes is suitable for teenaged audiences who will go to the cinema without their parents during Tet," Nguyen Minh Nga, a teacher and psychologist in HCM City, said.

Film-makers should take more responsibility for their works because "movies offer not only entertainment but also education."

But the producers dismiss the fears, insisting their film is safe for young viewers.

"Through our film, we hope young audiences, particularly teenagers, learn about bravery, honour, and responsibility," Dinh Thi Thanh Huong, a member of Thien Ngan's managing board, said.

She also believed critics will change their views after seeing the film.

Ghost at School releases in cinemas a week before Tet which falls on February 3 this year.

BHD Company and its partner, Saiga Films, commissioned Vietnamese-American Victor Vu to direct the comedy Co Dau Dai Chien (War of the Brides).

Vu, who studied film-making at Loyola Marymount University in the US, has made a kungfu comedy a la Jackie Chan.

Phuoc Sang Films' Thien Su... 99 (The Cherub... 99) is a romantic film that also has comedy and action.

The film features several famous artists, including upcoming singers Khong Tu Quynh and Ngo Kien Huy. — VNS

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Special Tet tours for visitors

HCM City-based travel agencies have unveiled special tours for foreigners who want to experience the atmosphere of the Lunar New Year or Tet.

Ben Thanh Tourist has launched a one-day tour to the Mekong Delta province of Vinh Long that will take visitors to Vinh Sang Tourist Park and people's houses in Vinh Long to take a look at rural life and Tet celebrations. It costs US$45 per person for groups of ten.

Saigontourist Travel Service Co has launched a tour called Celebrate Tet with Saigonese for five hours which will take in Cho Lon by cyclo, the flower market, and other tourist destinations in HCM City. Foreign guests can also join local people in making banh tet (the cylindrical glutinous rice cake) and have a meal with a local family. The tour is priced at $30 while a tour of My Tho costs $45.

A toast to beer drinking record

The first Viet Nam Beer Festival organised by the Mekong Star JSC will attempt to break a beer drinking record in HCM City later this month.

On each day of the festival from January 21 to 23 at the Ministry Zone 7 Stadium, 5,000 guests are expected to come to enjoy the local and international beers, Vietnamese and western foods, DJs, and live music.

On the first night an attempt to break the Vietnamese record for the most people to offer a toast will be made.

Cebu Pacific adds VN flights

Philippine carrier Cebu Pacific has added two more fights to its HCM City-Manila service, and plans to turn it into a daily service next Friday.

The additions take the number of flights a week to six.

The carrier carried around 30,000 passengers to and from Viet Nam last year, and expects to increase that number in 2011, Candice Lyog, the airline's vice-president for marketing and distribution, said.

Cham culture to go on display

The Cham Cultural Exhibition Centre in Binh Thuan Province will host a week of cultural events from January 30 to February 8 for Tet (Lunar New Year).

The highlights of the events will be an exhibition of costumes worn by Cham royalty, their crowns, seals, swords, and betel nut-making accessories.

Visitors can also see musical instruments and objects used by the Cham people in festivals, farming equipment such as buffalo carts and fish traps, stone jewellery, stone statues of Apsaras — the heavenly nymph of Hindu mythology – the gods Ganesa and Avalokitesvara, and a lion, linga-yoni, and documents written in the Cham language.

Rija Nugar (New Year Festival) and folk art performances will be held every night.

Saigontourist offers yacht tour

Saigontourist Travel Service Co has announced a four-day tour to Nha Trang from HCM City which includes a yacht tour in Nha Trang on board the four-star yacht King.

In Nha Trang, the yacht tour will start at the wharf in front of King Bao Dai's palace before cruising to Tre, Mun, Mot, Mieu, and Tam islands.

Visitors will cruise around Mun for swimming in the ocean, coral reef diving, and fishing before stopping at the Tri Nguyen Aquarium. Tourists on board the $1 million yacht can also request to stop at sights along the way.

The first batch of tourists will leave HCM City on January 22 and there will be one every Saturday. More information about the tour that will cost VND3.4 millon to 5.7 million is available at www.dulichtet.com . —VNS

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8th century coins discovered in Vinh Phuc

VINH PHUC — A local man recently found a pot containing 8kg of coins dating from the 8th to the 12th century while building a house in Van Hoi Commune in the northern province of Vinh Phuc's Tam Duong District, according to experts from the provincial museum asked to identify the discovery.

Each coin was 2.4cm in diameter, had a square central hole and Chinese characters on each side.

Zing Music Awards honour pop singers

HCM CITY — Singer Dam Vinh Hung bagged two major awards at the Zing Music Awards 2010 ceremony in HCM City on Wednesday, including nods for Impressive Performing Style and Artist of the Year. In addition, his songs Qua Con Me (After Dream) and Khoang Cach (Distance) were listed in the awards' Top 10. Singer and model Ho Ngoc Ha shared the Impressive Performing Style award with Hung.

The band V.Music received the award for Favourite Band, while the Most Promising Singer awards were given to Duong Trieu Vu and Vinh Thuyen Kim. Veterans Dan Truong and Thanh Thao were honoured as Favourite Male and Female Singer, respectively.

The awards were organised by the music-sharing website mp3.zing.vn.

Museums eye preservation methods

HCM CITY — A discussion on how to better preserve items on display in HCM City museums was co-hosted here on Wednesday by the City's departments of heritage and culture.

The discussion aimed at building budget estimates to improve humidity and dust control systems, storage, and the overall quality of the museums in the city.

Firefighter portrait wins national contest

HA NOI — The photo of a fire-fighter at work, Silence, taken by Diep Duc Minh won a gold medal at the national artistic photo contest.

Launched in September, the contest, Portraits of Today's Vietnamese People, received 4,112 photos from 767 professional and amateur photographers nationwide.

The organising board, the Viet Nam Photographic Artists' Association, selected the 119 best photos for an exhibition, of which, 12 have received awards.

The awards ceremony and opening of the exhibition will take place on January 24 at Gallery 45 on Trang Tien Street in Ha Noi.

Artist shows love for Mong people

HA NOI — Nguyen Quang Huy's exhibition Love opens today at the Art Viet Nam Gallery, Nguyen Khac Nhu Street, Ha Noi.

He showcases 25 portraits, landscapes, video and light sculptures of the Mong people in the mountainous province of Ha Giang, the result of his trips over the last 15 years.

"For me their life is with love, a special way of loving," Huy says. "The emotion is very direct, very unlike my ideas and what I know about love. Their love is more basic, natural, and difficult to quantify".

The exhibition will run until February 12.

Show pays tribute to late songstress

HA NOI — A concert of ca tru (ceremonial singing) to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the death of People's Artist Quach Thi Ho will be organised this Sunday at Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology, Nguyen Van Huyen Street, Ha Noi.

Artists from the UNESCO Ca Tru Centre will perform at the concert.

Ho (1913-2000) was one of the few Vietnamese traditional artists recognised internationally. In 1978, she was awarded an honourary diploma by UNESCO's International Music Council and the International Institute for Comparative Music Studies for her contribution in preserving "traditional music of great artistic and cultural value."

She was the first and only ca tru artist to have been granted the highest artistic title of People's Artist. — VNS

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Photos recall events of 1945

Attention!: President Ho Chi Minh (in white) visits the Tran Quoc Tuan military school in one of the images included in the new volume. – File Photo

Attention!: President Ho Chi Minh (in white) visits the Tran Quoc Tuan military school in one of the images included in the new volume. – File Photo

HA NOI — A book of photographs has been published covering the major political events in Viet Nam around the time independence was declared in Ha Noi in 1945.

Entitled Ky Uc Ve Nhung Ngay Doc Lap Dau Tien 1945-46 (Memory of the First Days of Independence), the book reproduces more than 200 images taken from August 17, 1945 to June 18, 1946.

Most photos were taken in the capital and northern provinces. The events were captured by photographers from the Ministry of Information of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam (the former name of the current Socialist Republic of Viet Nam).

The photos are mostly from a photo album which was later given to French journalist and historian Phillippe Devillers.

Sixty years later, it was re-presented to Professor Phan Huy Le, President of the Viet Nam Association of History Science, during his working trip to France.

Another book on Viet Nam's leading patriot, titled Ho Chi Minh, Nguoi Mang Lai Anh Sang (Ho Chi Minh, Bringer of Light), has also been published.

Contained 61 articles by domestic and foreign writers, the book's name is the headline of an article for the AsianTime written by Stanley Karnow. It was published on April 14, 1998.

A Pulitzer Prize winner, Karnow is a specialist on Viet Nam. — VNS

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HCMC to host festivities for Tet

The Ho Chi Minh City Youth Cultural House will organize lots of festivities to celebrate the Lunar New Year, which falls on February 3.

“Radiant Springs” photos exhibition, “Scholar Town” calligraphy demonstration, and souvenir booths will be scheduled at the Cultural House from January 22 to February 7.

Also to be organized are the Model Star fashion contest on January 23 and “Green Smile” comedy theatre festival on January 24-25.

The Cultural House will also organize other music bashes namely “Youth Dance” on January 27, “Shining” on January 28, “Spring of Love” on January 30, and “Dreaming Spring” on February 6.

The highlight is the “Warm Spring – Blessing” music show on January 29 to raise funds for poor children.

In addition, a Tet cake fest is planned at the House on February 1 to serve local and international tourists during Tet.

Besides, festival-goers will have a chance to witness a human chess performance on February 5 and traditional martial arts fest one day later.

The House will display Tet-themed magazines and newspapers to serve visitors from January 29 to February 9.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Vietnam Singer’s Day to raise funds and discuss career

Two hundred Vietnamese singers will attend the Singer’s Day in Ha Long city, in the northern province Quang Ninh on January 17-19.

Newbie and professional singers in Vietnam and overseas will participate in the event, according to Dam Vinh Hung, Vietnam’s famous pop star and also an organization member.

The event represents a chance for singers to meet up, share experience and exchange career notes. A three-hour seminar will be set up, focusing on celebrity culture, celebrities and community service, artists as objects of idolization, and artists and the internet.

As part of the program, the celebrities will join a charity auction and pay a visit to poor families in Quang Ninh province.

They will also have some fun touring around Ha Long Bay, one of the world’s natural heritages.

On the night of January 19, the singers will hit the stage with a grand performance to raise funds for charity.

Besides singers, models, actors and actress like Hong Anh, Quyen Linh, Chi Bao are also expected to join the event.

This is the fifth time Vietnam Singer’s Day is organized. Last year it was held in the coastal city Quy Nhon.

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Two books worth reading

HA NOI – A book of photographs has been published covering the major political events in Viet Nam around the time independence was declared in Ha Noi in 1945.

Entitled Ky Uc Ve Nhung Ngay Doc Lap Dau Tien 1945-46 (Memory of the First Days of Independence), the book reproduces more than 200 images taken from August 17, 1945 to June 18, 1946.

Most photos were taken in the capital and northern provinces. The events were captured by photographers from the Ministry of Propaganda of the Democratic Republic of Viet Nam (the former name of the current Socialist Republic of Viet Nam).

The photos are mostly from a photo album presented to an officer with the French High Commissioner by the revolutionary government.

The album then was given to the French journalist and historian Phillippe Devillers. Sixty years later, it was presented to Professor Phan Huy Le, President of the Viet Nam Association of History Science.

Another book on Viet Nam's leading patriot, titled Ho Chi Minh, Nguoi Mang Lai Anh Sang (Ho Chi Minh, Bringer of Light), has also been published.

Contained 61 articles by domestic and foreign writers, its name is the headline of an article for Asian Time written by Stanley Karnow. It was published on April 14, 1998.

A Pulitzer Prize winner, Karnow is a specialist on Viet Nam. – VNS

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From Poland with nostalgia

To paint a nation: Viet Nam by Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu is being displayed at his solo Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence) painting exhibition in HCM City. — VNS Photo Duc Ngoc

To paint a nation: Viet Nam by Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu is being displayed at his solo Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence) painting exhibition in HCM City. — VNS Photo Duc Ngoc

HCM CITY — The memories of his homeland and his love for it suffuse the works of Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu whose works are on display at an exhibition in HCM City.

"I am happy to have my first ever solo exhibition in my home country," Huu says.

Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence), organised by the Lotus Gallery and HCM City Exhibition Centre, features 66 oil paintings he created back in Poland.

"Painting is both my soul and expression of love to the motherland and my family there," the 70-year-old artist said.

Many of the works are simply named – Viet Nam, Thieu Nu Hue (Hue Woman) and Le Hoi Hai Ba Trung (Festival Memorising Trung Sisters).

He also pays tribute to his new life in Poland through paintings like Thieu Nu Ba Lan (Polish Woman).

Huu, who was born in Hue, moved to Poland in 1969 to continue his studies in shipbuilding and went on to marry a local woman.

In 1983, instead of writing a diary, he began to draw to register his nostalgia for his homeland.

His works have been displayed at several solo and group exhibitions in Poland, German, Russia, Japan, and China.

The exhibition, at the HCM City Exhibition Centre, 92 Le Thanh Ton Street, runs until next Thursday. — VNS

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Guidebook captures Can Tho spirit

A taste of the Mekong: The Bang Lang Stork Garden shown in

A taste of the Mekong: The Bang Lang Stork Garden shown in "Tham quan Can Tho qua tranh ve" (Sighseeing Can Tho through drawings), a beautifully illustrated guidebook.

CAN THO — The Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta city of Can Tho has become the first locality in the country to be featured in a colorfully illustrated tourist guide book that its promoters call MComic.

The Mekong Advertising and Supplying Travel Information Co., Ltd (Metinfo) will officially released yesterday the Tham Quan Can Tho Qua Tranh Ve" (Sighseeing Can Tho through drawings) guidebook.

The book employs a comic-graphic medium in which images convey a sequential narrative that helps tourists learn about the city on the banks of the Mekong with its beautifully portrayed natural landscapes and easy-to-remember historical and cultural stories.

"I hope that tourists can in a few minutes get a complete overview of Can Tho, the delta's biggest city," said Tran Kim Dinh, Metinfo director and chief editor of the book.

Established in 2005, Metinfo is the first travel advertising company in Viet Nam. Its experience over five years have helped it compile the book with succinct and accurate information.

The simple but detailed drawings capture the spirit and soul of rural Viet Nam in the southern region, a Metinfo representative said.

"We expect the Mcomic to be a valued souvenir for visitors to Can Tho," he added.

The illustrated guidebook, published by the Youth Publishing House, contains 92 18cm by 28cm pages using the Couche-Matt paper, and will sell at VND45,000 (US$2.25).

The Can Tho City Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism has bought 2,000 copies of the book to offer as gifts and to document the city's tourism promotion activities. — VNS

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Culture Vulture

A theatre production Parzival will be performed by Vietnamese artists tomorrow to conclude the German Year in Viet Nam 2010.

Parzival is a musical that was written especially for this German-Vietnamese co-production. The opera, Through the Valley, was written by conductor Pierre Oser, stage directed by Austrian-American Beverly Blankenship with libretto provided by internationally renowned German playwright Tankred Dorst.

Conductor Pierre Oser and director Beverley Blankenship began working with Vietnamese artists last November. They sat down with a correspondent from Culture Vulture to talk about the latest production.

Could you talk about the music in Parzival?

Oser: First, there was a concept to make a piece with opera, dancing and acting. Tankred Dorst and Ursula Ehler developed the libretto for this concept, then I started to work on the composition.

We started working with this opera l¸t November, while different groups of dancers, singers and actors worked separately, and recently we started rehearsing together on the same stage.

The story is universal and timeless and in my opinion can be understood by people from all over the world. It is a great pleasure to write music for such a strong and beautiful story, for the characters and the situations they find themselves in.

The production will involve singing, dancing and acting. Is it hard work for you as a conductor?

Oser: Yes, it's difficult and unusual for all of us. The orchestra is too big for the pit and we have had to place the musicians (and the conductor) at the back of the stage. That means that we have to work on stage with video monitoring. It's not easy for all of us. But the musicians, singers, dancers and actors are flexible and open and I appreciate their attitude.

I've done some big productions in Europe, and there are always problems and unexpected situations. That is part of the work, you have to be able to handle what happens.

There are about 100 people joining the opera. It is quite hard work, hard to organise. In a football match, we have 22 people but on the stage we have nearly 100 people working together.

Normally, people use one kind of art to tell a story. It was quite unusual when we mixed three different arts together like this, opera, dance and acting. So, we have to work with lots of actors, singers and dancers together. Moreover, we are using two languages, German and Vietnamese.

A big problem is that actors and musicians have to do their work and also follow others' work. Sometimes, when the actor is crying or acting on the stage, the music and mood has to work with it.

This is the first time Vietnamese artists have blended these different kinds of art together. Will they be successful?

Oser: We all give our best, we work hard and have concentrated together for more than two months and have learned a lot from each other. We hope that are hard work shows, which will let the audience in on part of the experience.

This is a great chance for us and also for the Vietnamese. We had lots of work with actors, but when the actors work with the orchestra, a step by step process seems to work better and better.

Dancing is one way of telling a story. When the audience see the moves on the stage and hear the singing, they will be able to experience the character's feelings.

Director Beverley Blankenship, how was your experience with working with Vietnamese artists for the first time?

Blankenship: Opera is very complex. It's hard work. This is not the first time I've done a project that involved acting, singing and dancing. I've worked for 30 years. I think Vietnamese actors are very good and so are the singers and dancers.

We have a lot of fun working with them. I enjoy working together. Music has the power to help people understand a story, and sometimes it's hard to convey that with acting alone. Three different arts in one opera; it's a normal form, but its complicated to pull off. Moreover, it's expensive to get the proper lighting and sound system.

The project started in November. I love Vietnamese acting, dancing and music. In the beginning, it's difficult to work together, but now things are getting better and better. — VNS

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Final three vie for Viet Nam's Top Model

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Model behaviour: From top right Nguyen Thu Thuy, Nguyen Thi Tuyet Lan and Khieu Thi Huyen

Model behaviour: From top right Nguyen Thu Thuy, Nguyen Thi Tuyet Lan and Khieu Thi Huyen

HCM CITY — The three top contestants shortlisted from thousands of candidates for the Viet Nam's Next Top Model reality show will compete during the final round in HCM City on January 23.

After participating in training with foreign experts during a programme aired on VTV3 in September last year, Nguyen Thi Tuyet Lan, Khieu Thi Huyen Trang and Nguyen Thu Thuy said they had learned more about the job of a professional fashion model.

According to organisers, the winner will receive a VND2 billion contract for two years with CA Model, a training course in New York with Wilhelmina Models, the trainer of winners of the beauty contest American's Next Top Model. She will also receive several gifts worth a total of VND800 million.

In order to prepare for the important night, the finalists will have to work even harder for the show later this month.

On Tuesday the three flew to Singapore for a photo shoot for Her World magazine with foreign photographers.

During the final night of the competition, to be held at the InterContinental Asiana Saigon, another 15 candidates who had been selected in the top 18, will model on the catwalk with some of Viet Nam's favourite singers.

The contest, a version of the US hit television series America's Next Top Model, has aired 15 episodes that have contained many exciting and surprising moments.

America's Next Top Model, which premiered on US television in 2003, is a popular annual talent search that chronicles the transformation of everyday young women into potentially fierce supermodels.

The programme concept has been licensed internationally, and there are versions of the series in the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Australia, South Korea, and China. — VNS

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STF brings happiness to flood-hit students

A representative of STF in the Central hands scholarships to school children in Tuy Phuoc District in Binh Dinh Province - Photo: Thanh Hai
The Saigon Times Foundation (STF) under the Saigon Times Group has donated 200 scholarships worth VND80 million to ethnic students in Tra Nam Commune, Nam Tra My District in Quang Nam Province.

The scholarships worth VND400,000 each will help students, who were affected by the flood in central provinces.

Nam Tra My is one of the poorest mountain districts in Vietnam with poor infrastructure and harsh weather. Both students and teachers in the locality have very difficult lives and often face floods and rock slides.

Nguyen Van Nam, principle of Tra Nam boarding elementary school, who has lived 20 years in the locality, said, “100 percent of the students here are ethnic minority people. Despite difficult lives, they try their best to go to school. The elementary students have to do their own cooking and clothes washing.”

Previously, STF also donated 200 scholarships worth VND100 million to students in Tuy Phuoc District in Binh Dinh Province - also a poor area accustomed to bad flooding. “The scholarships worth VND500,000 each are the biggest gift that the students have ever had. We would like to give our sincere thanks to enterprises and individuals who have shown care for our students here,” said Dang Thi Anh Tuyet, principle of Phuoc Thang 1 School in the locality.

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Windy Days and Land of Asylum at Idecaf

The artists performing tonight at Idecaf - Photo: The organizers
A concert called “Windy Days and Land of Asylum” will be at Idecaf, 8 p.m. tonight, at the Idecaf, 31 Thai Van Lung Street in HCMC’s District 1.

Pierre Diaz (saxophone), the string trio Zephyr, Huong Thanh (vocals), Alex Tran (percussions) and Nguyen Thu Thuy (Vietnamese violin) will perform.

The artists will play a subtle fusion of jazz, Eastern and Mediterranean rhythms and traditional Vietnamese music through song, words and improvisation.

Pierre Diaz began music in Languedoc-Roussillon (France) at age 12 and soon joined a band, touring around the region. His first CD (Duo), released in early 2000, was noticed by “hot jazz” critics. He toured in Vietnam in 2002, 2004, 2005 and 2006.

 Zephyr has members - cellist and soprano singer, Claire Menguy, violinist and mezzo-soprano singer Marion Diaques, violinist and alto singer Delphine Chomel.

Huong Thanh began learning cai luong (traditional southern opera) at age 10 and moved to France in 1988. In 1995, she met the jazzman Nguyen Le and found a whole new world of music. The result of this combination between cai luong and jazz was a CD titled Ile – Tales from Vietnam (2006), that became a hit and won prizes.

Born in France in 1975, Alex Tran began learning percussion and piano at the Academy of Metz at age seven. At 20, he taught for four years in a percussion school in Metz. Then he found his inspiration on stage. Meanwhile, Nguyen Thu Thuy often travels abroad for traditional music training and performances. She leads a group of traditional musicians and they tour all around Vietnam.

Ticket are VND100,000 and VND50,000 for students and are on sale at Idecaf.

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DJ group Tha Trickaz back to Vietnam

After the success of their last concert  last June about street culture “On Slam”, the DJ Group Tha Trickaz will come back to Vietnam by invitation of the Cultural and Cooperation Department of the French Consulate in HCMC to give a performance at the Idecaf, at 8 p.m. on January 17.

The group that has been going for 10 years, the so-called Tha Vietnam, includes two Vietnamese-French DJs Pho and iRaize. Tha Trickaz represents the combination between hip hop and electro music such as dub step or drum & bass. Their performances best illustrate the magic of combined imagination: rare and traditional vinyl cut up with sampling, scratching, analog instruments, live musicians & the MPC real time drumming.

Discovered from the contest “Printemps de bourges 2009”, winners of “SFR Young Music Talents 2010”, the originality of their music allows them to collaborate with respected artists such as Kid Koala, Dj Kentaro, Wax Tailor, Shabbaz The Disciple, Ali (45 Scientific).

CDs include Iclonoclast Sound Adventure – LP (2005) ; The Cloud EP (2009) ; Gypsy Robot et Megaphone (2010).

Tickets are available at the Idecaf at the prices of VND100,000 and VND50, 000 for students.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Vietnam’s Next Top Model reaches finale

Three young women will vie for top honors and some fabulous prizes in the final of the first Vietnam’s Next Top Model contest to be held at the InterContinental Asiana Saigon Hotel on January 23.

Khieu Thi Huyen Trang of Bac Ninh, Nguyen Thu Thuy of Hanoi, and Nguyen Thi Tuyet Lan of Ho Chi Minh City, the finalists, are now in Singapore for a photo shoot for Her World magazine and to savor the international modeling environment.

The 18 others who were eliminated in earlier rounds will also stride on the catwalk Sunday next week in costumes designed by Do Manh Cuong.

There will be performances by famous singers.

Representatives of Wilhelmina Models, one of the world’s largest and most successful model management companies and which has been training winners of America’s Next Top Model, will be present at the show.

The agency is set to provide training for the Vietnamese winner.

The winner will also get a two-year contract worth VND1 billion (US$50,000), a diamond membership from California Fitness and Yoga center, Revlon cosmetics, a diamond ring from Unique, and a Vespa scooter.

The program will be broadcast live on VTV3.

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Don Ca Tai Tu is not dying: German expert

German professor Gisa Jaehnichen is confident Vietnam’s “don ca tai tu” - a folk music genre distinctive to the South - is not dying as the country is seeking its recognition as a world heritage from UNESCO.

Jaehnichen who once did a long term researches on the genre is welcoming Vietnam file a national dossier on Don Ca Tai Tu to be submitted to UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage in March this year.

Tuoitrenews had an interview with her during her trip to Vietnam to attend a three-day conference on the topic concluding Tuesday in Ho Chi Minh City.

How did you get to know Don Ca Tai Tu in Vietnam?

I was in Vietnam studying the language in the early 80’s and I learned everything I could about the culture, including Vietnamese music, of which Don Ca Tai Tu is a part.

What about Don Ca Tai Tu that interests you?

I think all kinds of music have their own interesting characteristics. So is Don Ca Tai Tu.
People say that it’s amateur music but I think it’s very professional.

Amateurism doesn’t mean that you are lacking professional qualities. I would translate it as music of the talented. People need to have a big talent to play but they don’t need to make their income out of their music.

What important to me is that, you can create your own versions. You don’t have a fixed composition that you have to follow. You can input your emotions into the music, according to certain rules.

If you understand the rules you can play very attractively and each performance can be different.

Don Ca Tai Tu is unique to southern Vietnam. There’s also Don Ca Tai Tu Hue, but it’s completely different from the South, which has a more a mixed social background: you have traders, you have craftsmen, you have intelligentsia, you have rich people, you have more poor people, you have farmers altogether playing.

It does not matter where you are from and what your background is.

In Don ca Tai Tu, the music is written first and the lyrics come after and get fitted in. That’s how it’s differentiated from other music genres in Vietnam.

Compared to the other Vietnamese traditional music that you researched on, what is the biggest difference in methodology when you approached Don Ca Tai Tu?

It’s not so much different.

If there is a new instrument that can create different sounds better than the old one, I do not hesitate to try out.

For example with the guitar phim lom (guitar with modified frets) or the Vietnamese violin that has another tuning, I can play pieces of music - for two instruments on one instrument. So that’s a creative fact and the approach to Don Ca Tai Tu is not much different from others.

The methodology is always the same but the outcome is different.

How is Don Ca Tai Tu different from Cai Luong?

I have to say that Cai Luong is completely different from Don Ca Tai Tu. Don Ca Tai Tu is only the source of music but its spirit is not as in Cai Luong.

Cai Luong has another social function: it’s to entertain a big number of people on a big stage. But for Don Ca Tai Tu, you never play on a big stage and you shouldn’t do that because it’s for a small group of people sitting around, played without amplifier, just on the waterside or in the garden.

Cai Luong is on the stage to amuse people or to raise social problems in texts and dialogs and Don Ca Tai Tu is only like a tool to be used in Cai Luong. Of course, a few nice pieces from Cai Luong composed in the past went back to Don Ca Tai Tu. And then Don Ca Tai Tu musicians created longer pieces out of it.

Despite interesting exchanges between both, it does not mean that they have the same social functions. So you can hardly compare the two.

We still have people who love Don Ca Tai Tu but this generation may disappear soon. What do you think about that?

People often think: “If I deal with old things I’m backward and if I’m backward I’m not earning what I should earn to get a better living.” The consumerism, which is also reaching Vietnam very fast, leads to the assumption that old things are bad.

But it needs only a certain time, then people will come back to their inside. The traditions are needed to be sustainable as a society. You cannot just eliminate the old things and think you become a modern person. To be a modern person you need the traditions to create new things. If you think you can grow without traditions, then you are already old.

We’re trying to put Don Ca Tai Tu in the representative list which the UNESCO recognizes as well-preserved heritage. Don Ca Tai Tu is not endangered because many people are interested in it and it still has a life, which is the effort of many people in the last 2- 3 decades.

Don Ca Tai Tu is not dying out, I’m sure.

* Professor, Doctor Gisa Jaehnichen is now working in the faculty of Human Ecology, Music Department, Universiti Putra Malaysia. She wrote her dissertation on modern South Vietnamese compositions and her second lecturer’s thesis on instrumental music in Ca Tru (ancient genre of chamber music) and in Don Ca Tai Tu.

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Conference promotes Hue tourism

White light: Young women in ao dai ready to release flower lanterns into the Huong River at Hue Festival 2010. — VNS Photo Nhat Anh

White light: Young women in ao dai ready to release flower lanterns into the Huong River at Hue Festival 2010. — VNS Photo Nhat Anh

HA NOI — A conference on tourism promotion for the central province of Thua Thien-Hue has been held in Ha Noi to introduce tourism services and cultural programmes to the province this year.

The Hue Traditional Crafts Festival, to be celebrated from April 29 to May 3, will be the key event for tourists this year and will build on the achievements of previous festivals. It will specialise in the arts of bonsai and gastronomy with the theme of Vietnamese gastronomy in the tranquillity of Hue's gardens.

Festival goers will be immersed in the conspicuous cultural ambience through Viet Nam's divine culinary and bonsai arts. Cuisines from distinct geographical regions across the country will be featured: the culinary specialities of the south, the delicate cuisine of Hue with its royal meals, vegetarian food and popular dishes to be served in the city's splendid gardens, and the authentic tastes from the north.

Visitors will also have chance to meet prominent culinary researchers and experts, talented bonsai artists, antiques collectors and other artists in the country in the variety of fascinating artistic programmes and community activities.

For the national year of tourism in 2012, hosted by Thua Thien-Hue Province, the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism will launch many tourism programmes.

For example, the department will organise tours to discover the treasures of Hue and help tourists understand the legacy of the Nguyen dynasty by experiencing the culture and visiting pagodas.

Let's Experience Hue will introduce tourists to Hue festivals, crafts villages and royal life. Tours take visitors on various routes through the provinces and allow them to discover the heritage of the city. For those who want to relax, there will be walking tours that take visitors to forests, to rest by Lang Co Beach and to discover ancient houses.

"Thua Thien-Hue is an attractive destination for tourists as tourism is the key industry of the province," said Phan Tien Dung, director of the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

"Last year, Hue received 1.5 million visitors, 700,000 of which were foreigners."

At the conference, a co-operation memorandum was signed between Ha Noi's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department and its counterparts from Thua Thien-Hue Province and HCM City.

A similar conference for the same purpose will take place in HCM City on January 19. — VNS

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Literature Prizes go to acclaimed writers

The smell of success: Writer Suong Nguyet Minh. — File Photo

The smell of success: Writer Suong Nguyet Minh. — File Photo

HA NOI — A collection of six short stories by veteran army writer Suong Nguyet Minh has won the Viet Nam Writers Association annual Literature Prize.

Di Huong (Strange Fragrance) focuses on different human issues, especially modern society. While Dem Thanh Vo Cung (The Holy Night) is about the loneliness of a man who lives happily with his wife and children, Cha Toi (My Father) is about an old veteran, who can't adapt with the material lives of his other family members.

Dem Mua Ha Tuyet Roi (Snowing on a Summer Night) is a love story in which the characters face the fading value of love in a fast-tempo world.

The stories present Minh's new writing style, which is "a well combined balance of reality, romance and myth", according to the author. Sex is also mentioned in some of the stories in a fine, sophisticated way. "Like a chef who needs a special spice to create a unique flavour for his dish, sex is used to support the stories' structure, in harmony with the rest of the plot," he said.

Strange Fragrance, published in 2009, won the hearts of the judges who included nine well-known Vietnamese writers.

The Literature Prize was also awarded for a children's short-story collection, Chiec Ve Vao Cong Thien Duong Xanh (Ticket to the Blue Heaven) by Que Huong, and Nguyen Bich Lan's version of Slumdog Billionaire topped the translation category.

The winners will receive their prizes at an awards ceremony scheduled for later in the month in Ha Noi. — VNS

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Singers Day to discuss celebrity responsibilities

HA NOI — The fifth Singers Day will be held on January 17-19 in the northern city of Ha Long.

The day is expected to attract around 200 domestic and overseas Vietnamese singers.

The conference will host a discussion on celebrity culture, their artistic responsibility to the community, artists and internet.

The Noi Vong Tay Lon (Joining Arms) charity gala will take place on January 19 to raise funds for local poor fishing people.

The previous Singers Day was held in Quy Nhon last year.

1,000th anniversary book takes music prize

HA NOI — A book on One-Thousand Year Thang Long - Ha Noi has won the highest prize of the year 2010 by the Viet Nam Musicians' Association.

The book consists of five parts covering court music, ca tru (ceremonial singing), traditional music, modern music and music criticism.

The awards ceremony was held last night at the headquarters of Radio Voice of Viet Nam in Ha Noi.

Viet Nam Orchestra charms in New York

NEW YORK — The National Symphony Orchestra of Viet Nam on Saturday performed at a peace concert held at New York City's Carnegie Hall together with artists from Japan, South Korea and the US.

Vietnamese Ambassador to the US Bui The Giang stressed that the event was a symbol of friendship and closer co-operation between peoples. The event also sent a message of peace and friendship to peoples all over the world, he said.

The concert was conducted by Japanese conductor Honna Tetsuji and featured South Korean teenage talented pianist Isadora Kim.

Photos convey kids' views on social safety

HCM CITY — Photographs taken by a group of fourth and fifth grade students to express their views on pedestrian safety are on show at an exhibition at a HCM City primary.

"Photovoice" at the Nguyen Minh Quang Primary School in District 9, which has more than 100 photos taken by eight children, is part of a project to use photographs to promote social change and improve the quality of life in communities.

Express delivery company FedEx and global NGO Safe Kids Worldwide, the sponsors, have already carried out this project in Brazil, Canada, China, India, South Korea, and the Philippines.

In Viet Nam, they launched it together with the Asia Injury Prevention Foundation in October.

They selected students for photography training and pedestrian-safety education who then took the photos.

"The project will help educate children about pedestrian and traffic safety," Mirjam Sidik, executive director of the Foundation, said.

The photos will be sent to several other schools in the city where they will be displayed for three days each. — VNS

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Sophie Paris donates helmets to primary school students

Sophie Paris Vietnam on Monday presented more than 200 helmets to students at Dong Ba Primary School in HCMC through the Asia Injury Prevention (AIP) Foundation’s Helmets for Kids program to help promote road safety among local youngsters.

AIP Foundation has distributed helmets to almost 1,000 students at the primary school since 2008 under the program. This year, Sophie Paris Vietnam donated bright magenta helmets to the first graders, while older students received replacement helmets.

“Education, safety and development of future generations is a priority at Sophie Paris, and the Helmets for Kids program is a great way to ensure students become safer, smarter road users,” said Nick Jonsson, general director of Sophie Paris Vietnam.

Since 2000, AIP Foundation’s school-based Helmets for Kids has provided students with helmets and road safety education. Parents and teachers are also educated about the importance of helmet use and the need to encourage students to wear their helmets during their daily rides to school.

Mirjam Sidik, executive director of AIP Foundation said, “Our goal with the Helmets for Kids program is to effectively make the helmet a part of the school uniform.”

Helmets for Kids is a public-private partnership platform, through which private corporations sponsor schools and local authorities in partnership with AIP Foundations to implement programs.  Nguyen Ngoc Tuong, vice chief of the HCMC Department of Traffic Safety Committee, quoted statistics from the National Traffic Safety Committee saying that traffic accidents caused 11,449 fatalities and 10,633 injuries last year.

“Most parents do not think about getting helmets for their children or encouraging them to wear helmets to prevent injuries,” Tuong said.

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Student film about baby burials wins contest

Four finalists in the fiction category at the award ceremony - Photo: Thanh Hang
A film inspired by a story about burial services for aborted fetuses won the “Magic of the Heart” student short film contest in HCMC that was announced on Saturday.

 The documentary film “Rest in peace, my baby!” by the team from REC, a student media club, won the first prize in the documentary category. The runner-up was “He” by Tran Minh Nhat, a student from the Radio and Television Broadcasting College II.

Nguyen Le Quyen, an REC member, said their film “Rest in peace, my baby!” was inspired by an old article about a man who conducted burial services for still born or aborted babies in Nha Trang.

“We had to struggle with so many problems to make the film. Sometimes we thought that maybe those babies didn’t want us to make a film about them. Yet we managed to finish it, because we had promised Phuc, the character in our film, to spread the message to the public to stop abortions.” The festival gave prizes for the second runner-up, the most-viewed film, and a special prize for best experimental film. The prizes were cash and scholarships to study multimedia at FPT Arena that hosted the competition.

To watch the films, visit www.youtube.com/user/lienhoanphim.

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Promising The Earth

The failure to realise promises of the people who won the bidding at the charity auction for the flood victims in central Vietnam at the “Miss Earth Contestants and Entrepreneurs” night on November 11 in HCM City has sparked a public outrage

The auction, broadcast live on television around the country and overseas, officially announced the winners’ names along with the amount bid which was over VND74 billion in total. It was expected that after deducting expenses and the original costs of auctioned items, the money would go to the HCM City Red Cross Chapter to distribute to the flood victims in central Vietnam. However, except for small donations that were not involved in the auction, the promises of tens of billions of dong were not honored by the auction winners.

The money never made it to the organizers and the HCM City Red Cross Chapter. The event organizers and the chapter could not even confirm who the winners were as they made their bids over the phone. The only successful bidder that they could be sure of was the director of Bao Long Company who was present in the auction room, and bought a wooden set of four sacred creatures at VND47.9 billion. For some reasons, he did a U-turn and did not pay the money he pledged but instead claimed to donate VND 1 billion.

Many netizens have pointed out the sheer lack of professionalism and preparation of the auction organizers. A serious auction team would have selected people with compassion and the financial ability to participate in the bidding and sent them the details about the authenticity of the items to be auctioned prior to the event. In addition, the organizers did not set out clear, specific provisions about the terms of participation and the obligation to honor commitment. They even allowed auction participants to bid via the telephone without identity checks. The organizers probably relied on the involvement of famous models and beauty queens as MCs to ensure the auction success!

The biggest tragedy is that an auction for a noble purpose has turned out to be a cruel joke. The organizers proved to be incompetent, but worse still the auction winners who broke their promises were just adding insult to injury for the flood victims, and toying with the trust of the television audience and the goodwill of the organizers. They made use of the auction for a brief mention of their company names on national TV and then backed away holding onto their purse-strings; or they regarded the charity auction as a joke. What’s funny about spitting in the face of charity work that brings relief to people who are suffering and homeless through no fault of their own. Have they ever thought about their compatriots in disaster or had a prick of conscience? These heartless souls should never be allowed to participate in a charity auction again. How could they take advantage of it and joke that way? They must be completely without a conscience, as a netizen has said.

This is not the first time that the winning bidders in charity auctions have reneged on their word and shirked their responsibility after appearing in front of the public and television camera. This time, the cheating and falsity has crossed the line. Decent people will not tolerate the despicable person who falsely reaches out a hand of support to the desperate flood victims only to pull it away when they try to take it.

Who can remain indifferent when they know that the flooding season has claimed nearly 200 lives and inflicted material damage worth tens of billions of dong? And still, there are people who can be so callous as to flirt with that pain.

Does that mean compassion these days has become the kind of virtue that you only read about and even a noble deed can be easily turned into a joke? I hope that it is not so, because so many people have come forward to voice their sympathy with those unfortunates, and expressed their outrage with the callers who used the charity auction as a free chance to polish their names, or just for fun.

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