Showing posts with label Central Highlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Central Highlands. Show all posts

Monday, January 10, 2011

Province brews up coffee fest

HCM CITY—A coffee festival to be held in Buon Ma Thuot, the capital of Dac Lac in the Central Highlands, will highlight the central role of the crop in the province's and Central Highlands' economy and society.

Y Dham ENuol, Dac Lac's deputy chairman, has told the media that the four-day event starting on March 10 will promote tourism, coffee trade, and investment in the industry as well as the image of his province as a coffee city.

The opening day will be dedicated to thanksgiving for the bean and will feature a lion-dance parade and elephants carrying the coffee symbol.

Trung Nguyen Corp will display the more than 10,000 items to be housed at a World Coffee Museum it plans to build later this year in the province.

An exhibition on the coffee industry that will run through the festival will be attended by 160 companies, both from Viet Nam and overseas, who will display their products, technologies, and services at 500 booths.

There will also be performances by ethnic groups living in Tay Nguyen and art groups from coffee growing nations.

A national record for largest coffee filter will be created on March 11.

Pele, widely considered the King of Football of all time and a citizen of Brazil, the world's largest coffee growing country, will attend the festival. — VNS

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Sunday, January 9, 2011

Festival to savor coffee

More than 150 Vietnamese and foreign coffee entrepreneurs will showcase their latest coffee products and technology at the third Buon Me Thuot Coffee Festival, the organizers have said.

The event will take place from March 10-14 in the Central Highlands Buon Me Thuot town.
It aims to boost the development of Vietnamese coffee exports and to promote the investment potential of Dak Lak Province.

Vietnam plans to turn the Central Highlands town of Buon Ma Thuot into the “coffee capital” of the world as part of efforts to make Vietnamese coffee better known in the world market.

Buon Ma Thuot Town in Dak Lak Province is the largest coffee growing region in Vietnam.

Under the plan, designed by Trung Nguyen Group, one of the leading coffee exporters in Vietnam, Buon Ma Thuot town will be developed into a tourist destination where visitors can learn more about coffee cultivation and the culture of drinking coffee.

The plan also focuses on promoting the town's coffee products to the world.
Coffee is one of Vietnam’s top exports, generating more than US$1 billion last year.

Vietnam is the world’s biggest grower of robusta, used in instant drinks and espressos.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Dac Lac hangs on to vanishing heritage

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

DAC LAC — The Central Highlands province of Dac Lac is being stripped of its cultural heritage as gongs, drums and many ancient hunting knives and tools are used to feed the thriving trade in ethnic antiques, officials warn.

Buon Trap Town in Krong Ana District boasts an all-woman team playing the Jo, a gong designed exclusively for women of the E De ethnic group.

"The team play on two ten-gong sets which are owned by a local family. Six gongs were sold to antique collectors in recent years and two others were broken," said Tran Viet Du, an official with the district's Culture Office said.

"When the team play the Jo, we have to rent gongs from a nearby town for the performers," Du said.

"Buon Trap is one of many locations in the province where gongs have been sold to traders that can never be replaced again," said Y Wai Bya, director of Dac Lac's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.

"That is due largely to the poverty of the local people. Many people do not hesitate to sell antique gongs to collectors to get large sums of money," he said.

Du and Bya are among many officials who have expressed growing alarm about the antique trade in Central Highlands provinces.

"Researchers specialising in the Central Highlands' culture and history need to come up with long-term strategies for the preservation of gongs, drums and other old items relating to ethnic culture," Bya said.

Bya admitted that the province still lacked policies to preserve gongs and train officials to gain a profound understanding of traditional music and the culture of ethnic people.

Bya said the provincial People's Committee recently approved a policy to assist gong owners.

"Each family that owns an antique gong will receive an annual stipend of VND500,000 (US$25) from the province," he said, giving no further details.

The committee is also working on a project to build in each village a museum to display traditional musical instruments and items used in the daily lives of the ethnic people.

"More festivals will be organised in Dac Lac's villages and districts where ethnic people can perform gongs, drums and introduce their folk music to outside audiences," Bya said.

The centuries-old gong music is a precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. They play the gong to commemorate a good harvest, during festivals, and to mark occasions like the birth of children, weddings, and funerals.

The Central Highlands gong culture was recognised as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2006.

Cultural researcher Y Duong, grandson of Y Jut Nie K'Dam, author of the first Vietnamese – E De Dictionary, said he had spent many years working on a project to protect gongs and would submit it soon to the Dac Lac People's Committee for consideration.

Apart from ancient gongs and drums, K'pan long benches used by gong performers and tools used by hunters of elephants and wild animals are much sought after by antique traders.

Ama Pet, a well-known elephant hunter in Buon Don town, said he was among few people who still kept the leather ropes used in elephant hunting.

Pet caught and domesticated 15 elephants using his rope which is more than 10m in length. Elephant hunting is now banned in Dac Lac. He said he intends to sell his rope to have money to spend for the family.

He said he has priced the rope at VND15 million (US$750) including a piece of buffalo leather used to cover the back of the elephant. — VNS

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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Museum celebrates bygone era

Seeking the past: Y Thim works hard to find items to exchange. He is sometimes willing to pay up to tens of millions of dong for unique and rare artefacts.

Seeking the past: Y Thim works hard to find items to exchange. He is sometimes willing to pay up to tens of millions of dong for unique and rare artefacts.

Long legacy: Y Thim's house in Cu Ea Buar Hamlet, Buon Ma Thuot City, is known locally as the

Long legacy: Y Thim's house in Cu Ea Buar Hamlet, Buon Ma Thuot City, is known locally as the "Museum of the Central Highlands Legacy". — VNA/VNS Photos Le Nguyen Phu

DAC LAC — On a journey to the Tay Nguyen (Central Highlands) province of Dac Lac, visitors can discover a unique house which showcases machinery and artefacts of a bygone era in the surrounding villages.

The house in Cu Ea Buar Hamlet, Buon Ma Thuot city, is privately owned by Centre of Culture and Information official Y Thim and known locally as the "Museum of Central Highlands Legacy".

Y Thim regularly drives his ploughing machine to remote areas to collect old and broken machinery and artefacts for restoration.

The devices, including musical instruments – one example is a flat metal disc (gong) which is hit by a mallet – ornamental jars, Kpan chairs and so on. All have been thrown away by villagers.

"Once I visited a villager's house and saw his family selling a set of damaged gong to a scrap dealer. I offered to buy the instrument for a higher price and then have them restored," says Y Thim.

Y Thim says that he always pondered the fact that the modern generation no longer sees value in such cultural and subsistence artefacts, causing the instruments and machinery to be discarded and forgotten.

"I want to preserve these traditional treasures of the villages," says Y Thim.

Many traditional pieces are still plentiful and easy to find, and generally their owners just hand them over and are glad to get rid of them, Y Thim says. But with rare and unique artefacts, he has to find something to exchange for them or to pay for them, sometimes up to tens of millions of dong.

For instance, Y Thim once heard of someone who owned a set of 10 bronze-mixed-gold gong aged 100 years old. But the owner wanted to exchange them for three male elephants, which the family could not afford. After frequent visits Y Thim got the price down to three buffaloes, which were worth 20 taels (US$ 33,52).

At present, there are nearly 20 sets of gong, 30 ornamental jars and many other unique devices in Y Thim's museum, the results of 20 years collecting.

Y Than Nie K'dam, the patriarch of Ea Bong Village in Cu Ea Buar Hamlet, says the collection maybe worth "tens of elephants and hundred of buffaloes".

"Even the total number of villagers can not compare to his collection," K'dam said.

Y Thim is also a music teacher and teaches children in the village how to use the ethnic devices.

His two sons, Y Nal and Y Na are graduates of the Military of Culture and Arts College, while his youngest child, Y Thu E Ban, is capable of playing eight kinds of musical instruments.

Y Thim, whose family and museum house are considered "living treasures" of the Central Highlands, says: "Preserving traditional devices is necessary so that younger generations will learn about their ancestors and will treasure the cultural legacies of their fathers." — VNS

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Saturday, October 2, 2010

“Central Highlands Flame” dies of cancer

Central Highlands’ pop singer Y Moan drew his last breath at the age of 53 at 15:25 pm on October 1, after a prolonged fight with stomach cancer.

Known by his fans as Y Moan, Y Moan Enuoi’s real name is Y Blieo. He was born September 6 1957, one of seven children in an Ede ethnic family of modest means.

Y Moan was discovered after Vietnam’s reunification in 1976. He left his home in the mountains of Tay Nguyen (Central Highlands) and headed for Hanoi upon being recruited by the Song and Dance Troupe.

He studied at the then Hanoi Conservatory of Music from 1979 until 1986. During that time, he met Nguyen Thi Minh Ngau from the northern province of Thai Binh whom he married shortly thereafter. He then also met composer Nguyen Cuong.

Nguyen Cuong wrote Oi M’Drak especially for Y Moan after witnessing his passion for music and love for his land. The song became a turning point for the artists’ respective careers. The song-writer mentored the singer and the two formed a strong bond which lasted throughout their careers.

Y Moan never stopped singing about the Central Highlands' mountains and forests. He also sang songs by known song-writers such as, Tran Tien, Linh Nga Nie K'dam, and Ama No. Songs such as  Oi M’Drak (Hey, M’Drak), Ly ca phe Ban Me (Ban Me coffee cup) and Doi chan tran (Bare foot) expressed his love for his homeland and introduced the beauty of the Vietnamese landscape to millions of people both within and outside the country.

Y Moan’s international performances included China, North Korea, South Korea, Thailand, Germany, Poland and France.

In 1997, Y Moan was conferred the honorary title of Meritorious Artistfor exceptional artistic achievements by the Vietnamese State.  

In 2000 the Culture and Information Ministry recognized his lifetime career achievements.

He was conferred the title of People’s Artist, the highest honor given by the State to an artists, by President Nguyen Minh Triet during his live show Flame of the Central Highlands on August 6 of this year.

Y Moan’s funeral will be held at his private house in Dha Prong village of Buon Me Thuot City in DakLak Province Tuesday. He will be buried at Dha Prong Cemetery on October 5.

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Singer Y Moan dies of cancer

People's Artist: Singer Y Moan has died after a long fight with stomach cancer at his home in Buon Ma Thuot city in the Central Highlands of Dac Lac Province. — VNA/VNS Photo

People's Artist: Singer Y Moan has died after a long fight with stomach cancer at his home in Buon Ma Thuot city in the Central Highlands of Dac Lac Province. — VNA/VNS Photo

HA NOI — People's Artist and pop singer Y Moan died yesterday at the age of 53 after a long fight with stomach cancer.

His funeral will be held in the Central Highlands city of Buon Ma Thuot in Dac Lac Province on Tuesday.

Born in 1957, Y Moan was discovered in 1976 after reunification. He left his home in the mountains of Tay Nguyen (Central Highlands) and headed for Ha Noi when he was recruited for the Song and Dance Troupe.

He studied at the then Ha Noi Conservatory of Music from 1979 until 1986.

He is noted for singing songs about the Central Highlands' mountains and forests written by people like Nguyen Cuong, Tran Tien, Linh Nga Nie K'dam, and Ama No, making sure the land became well-known to millions of people both within and outside the country.

The Central Highlands singer who dedicated his life to panegyrising his homeland was conferred the title of People's Artist by President Nguyen Minh Triet this year.

It is the highest honour given by the State for artists. — VNS

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