Showing posts with label Minh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minh. Show all posts

Monday, February 21, 2011

Masked hip-hop show comes to town

A hip-hop show titled “Faces” by chorographers Raphael Hillebrand and Sébastien Ramirez from Germany and France will take place in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City on 25 and 27 February.

Top hip-hoppers such as Hoang Ky Anh, Nguyen Chinh Dung, Nguyen Minh Kien will perform together with foreign dancers.

All artists will wear masks during the performance to send a message: “Are we all wearing masks to cover up our face in today’s society?”

Introduced for the first time in 2008, in an event organized by Vietnam Goethe Institute and French center L’Espace, the hip hop performance has since gained more fans as it reflects a dynamic, open and modern Vietnam, a country with rich culture and good preservation of traditional values.

The show will take place in Hanoi’s Youth Theater on February 25 and Ho Chi Minh Ctiy’s Ben Thanh Theater on February 27.

Free tickets can be obtained at Goethe Institute, No 56-57 Nguyen Thai Hoc, Hanoi or No 18, Street 1, Do Thanh, Ward 4, District 3, Ho Chi Minh City.

After performing in Vietnam, the crew will tour France and Germany.

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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Free documentaries to be screened in Vietnam

Six free documentary films produced in the 1960s will be aired at a two-day Vietnam Documentary Film Festival in Hanoi, starting today to mark the country’s Communist Party’s anniversary, falling on February 3.

At the fest, the audience will have a chance to see six films namely “Images of late President Ho Chi Minh’s life”, “The South in My Heart”, “Ho Chi Minh – His Image”, “General Vo Nguyen Giap – one Century, one Human Life”, “Communist Soldiers”, and “From Ba waterfall to Son La hydroelectric plant”.

Also in the program, the filmmakers will have a Q&A session with the audience.

In other news, Ho Chi Minh City-based Idecaf will screen the film “Luon o ben con” (Always by your side), which won the Best Documentary award at the Vietnam International film festival in Hanoi last October.

Tickets costing VND15,000 (US$0.75) each are available at 28 Le Thanh Ton Street, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City.

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Collected works of Uncle Ho released

HA NOI — The 15-volume Ho Chi Minh Toan Tap (Complete Works by Ho Chi Minh) was re-issued on Monday for the third time on the occasion of the 11th National Party Congress.

A total 3,300 copies with updated information on important documents of the late president have been printed. The collection was published for the first time in 1990 to commemorate Ho Chi Minh's 100th birthday and included 10 volumes. It was later reprinted in 2000 and included 12 volumes.

Nguyen Duy Hung, director of the National Politics Publishing House, said the latest edition would help readers more fully understand the invaluable spiritual legacy left by the late president.

Noble prizes to be announced

HCM CITY — The Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Awards 2010 for musicians and actors will be announced on Saturday.

The singing awards at Hoa Binh Theatre, HCM City, will be broadcast live.

There will be five categories – Favourite Male and Female Pop Singers, Favourite Male and Female Country Singers and Favourite Song.

There will also be awards for Favourite Male and Female Stage Artists, Best Comic Actor and Best Stage Play.

The acting category will include best TV Actor and Actress, Best Movie Actor and Actress, Favourite Master of Ceremonies (MC) and best Film of the Year.

Meanwhile, on Monday, the Mai Vang Awards will be presented to the best 10 singers.

The annual awards have been organised by Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper since 1995.

HCM City TV spreads Tet cheer

HCM CITY — A music performance by pop stars and auction of ornamental trees and fish will be part of a charity event HCM City Television and Farmers Association will organise tomorrow to raise funds for poor farmers in the city during Tet (Lunar New Year).

The proceeds from the annual programme will be used to repair or build more than 150 houses for poor farmers and gift health insurance cards and presents to them.

Organisers will auction two rare mai (ochna) trees with "beautiful roots" which will bring their owners "luck and wealth", and two sets of Japanese carp symbolising the five elements and four directions.

The concert will be held at 7pm at the HTV Theatre, and broadcast live on HTV9.

Last year the programme managed to raise more than VND3.9 billion (US$185,000), enabling 237 houses to be repaired or built and 927 health insurance cards and 117 scholarships to be provided.

Ha Noi waiter represents region

HCM CITY — Tran Trong Hai Ha from Green Tangerine Restaurant in Ha Noi has won the ticket to represent South East Asia in the Asia sommelier competition in June.

After winning The Best Vietnamese Sommelier Competition for French Wine 2010 last October, Ha represented Viet Nam in the Southeast Asia sommelier competition at the Equatorial Hotel last week and won The First Runner-up prize. Peter Teng from Malaysia was the winner.

Both also won a course on wine tasting in France on March.

The contest was organised by Sopexa, which is the French food and wines PR and communications agency, and Saigon Bartender Sommelier Guild.

Ha and Teng beat eight representatives from Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and Viet Nam. — VNS

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Talented young violists to perform in HCMC

International award-wining violinist Bui Cong Duy and other young musicians from the Vietnam National Music Academy will perform in Ho Chi Minh City Wednesday.

Violinists Ha Thanh Vinh, Bui Cam Ly, Nguyen Linh Uyen, Nguyen Thien Minh, Chi Linh, and Do Hoang will join Duy to perform pieces by Joseph Haydn, Edward Elgar, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, and Pablo de Sarasate.

The concert will be conducted by Nguyen Anh Son and Tran Nhat Minh.

Tickets to the event organized by the HCMC Ballet Symphony Orchestra and Opera are available at the Ho Chi Minh City Opera House, District 1, for VND150,000 and VND250,000.

Duy, born in 1981, is the eldest son of musical parents who introduced him to the violin at the age of five. At the tender age of 10 he joined Russia's Novosibirk Music Conservatory.

He has won a clutch of international competitions, including the 1997 Tchaikovsky International Music Competition for violinists aged under 18.

He has performed in many countries including Russia, Poland, Switzerland, Italy, and France.
 

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Friday, January 14, 2011

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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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

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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Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Ho Chi Minh City to host beer festival

The first Vietnam Beer Festival will be held at the Military Zone 7 Stadium in Ho Chi Minh City from January 21.

Organized by Mekong Star JSC, it will feature a free flow of Coors Light, Budweiser, Saigon, and Hanoi beers, a buffet with Vietnamese and Western foods, DJs, and live bands.

The organizers hope to attract 5,000 people on each of the three days. An attempt will be made on the first night to break the Vietnamese record for the most people toasting at a time.

Each of the three days will have a different theme.

Tu hai giai huynh de (The whole world is a brotherhood) on the first day will aim to bring people together.

Nang ly cung nguoi dep (Cheers with the beauties) on the second day will feature female celebrities.

Famous Vietnamese footballers will drop by for a beer on the third day for Vui cung bong da (Have fun with football).

There will be lucky draws offering prizes of Iphone 4, Ipad, and Vespa LX125 scooter.

The fun will last from 4 pm to midnight on the opening day and from 10.30 am to midnight on the other days.

Tickets costing VND330,000 can be booked at http://beerfestivalvn.com/.
 

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Saturday, December 11, 2010

Ho Chi Minh biopic to premiere

A rickshaw success: A scene from the film Vuot Qua Ben Thuong Hai (Across the Shanghai). — VNS File Photos

A rickshaw success: A scene from the film Vuot Qua Ben Thuong Hai (Across the Shanghai). — VNS File Photos

HA NOI — The joint Viet Nam-China film, Vuot Qua Ben Thuong Hai (Across the Shanghai), which charts the revolutionary life of President Ho Chi Minh as the young Nguyen Ai Quoc, will premier in cinemas throughout Viet Nam next Friday.

The drama tracks the revolutionary activities of Nguyen Ai Quoc as he travelled from Hong Kong to Shanghai during 1933 and 1934.

It portrays the young revolutionary's humanity, emotions and nobility as he plays with children, recalls childhood folksongs and arranges offerings for his ancestors on New Year's Eve.

Although French and Chinese nationalist police hunted the escapee after he fled Hong Kong in 1933, Soong Ching-ling and patriotic Vietnamese and international friends in China helped him to reach Vladivostock, Russia the following year.

Vietnamese writers Ha Pham Phu and Le Ngoc Minh and Chinese author Jia Fei wrote the film's script and it was produced by the Viet Nam Writers Association's Film Studio and its Chinese partner, the Zhoujiang Film Studio.

Trieu Tuan, the film's director, says the film highlights the remarkable work of the greatest leader in Viet Nam's modern history in leading his country to freedom.

"Through our film, we hope young audiences will understand the spirit and revolutionary causes of the leader," he says.

Actor Minh Hai of the Viet Nam Drama Theatre, who plays Nguyen Ai Quoc in the film, was chosen from dozens of candidates, says he improved while filming.

"Embodying President Ho Chi Minh is always an honour and a challenge for any actor," he says.

"I'm very proud of having played the young Ho Chi Minh. Besides its historical and political implications, the film is also about the hero of Vietnamese youth," says Hai, adding that he had needed all of his ability for the role.

Revolutionary road: Poster of the film with English subtitles.

Revolutionary road: Poster of the film with English subtitles.

Hai has played Ho Chi Minh before–in the drama Bac Ho Ra Tran (Uncle Ho Goes to the Battle). He and his colleagues did extensive research, going through books and documents about the President before and during the filming.

Many of the film's scenes were shot in China's Hengdian Film Studios in Zhejiang Province. The crew also filmed in Hue, Da Nang, Quang Nam and Nghe An provinces.

The Vietnamese Government supported the film to 70 per cent of total outlay, or VND11 billion (US$550,000). Officials hope that the end result will not only be a valuable historic film, but also a work of art.

The film was originally scheduled for earlier release but post-production work delayed the project.

It will screen at Megastar cinemas in Ha Noi and HCM City and at Ha Noi's National Cinema Centre. — VNS

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

European Music Festival features performances by Austrian duo

HA NOI — The Austrian duo z.b.+ performs in Ha Noi tomorrow as part of this year's European Music Festival.

Christof Dienz is a classically-trained musician who played bassoon for the Vienna Opera Orchestra during the 1990s, touring extensively with that organisation before discovering the zither. His 2005 album Dienz Zithered received the Pasticcio Award from the Austrian cultural radio station O1 for an exceptional Austrian CD, and Dienz was presented the SKE award in 2006. He also won a number of other prizes and appeared at music festivals around the world.

Bassist Matthias Pichler studied studied jazz at the Anton Bruckner University in Linz. He has received the Hans Koller Jazz Prize twice and was named Best Sideman of the Year in 2006. Last month, Pichler won first prize in the International Double Bass Convention in Berlin.

The duo's debut performance will take place at the Youth Theatre at 11 Ngo Thi Nham Street, Ha Noi. They will then appear in HCM City on Monday for a performance at the Conservatory of Music, 112 Nguyen Du Street, District 1.

China publishes book on Ho Chi Minh to celebrate 60 years of relations

Beijing — China 's World Knowledge Publishing House has published a book on President Ho Chi Minh on the occasion of the 60th founding anniversary of the China-Viet Nam diplomatic ties.

The 296-page book titled Ho Chi Minh – A Legendary Life is authored by former Chinese Ambassador to Viet Nam Li Jia Zhong. It is divided into four chapters following the president's life since his young days until he wrote the famous testament: his journey abroad to seek the way to liberate the country, his leadership in the August Revolution and the struggles against the French colonialists and the US aggressors as well as stories about Ho Chi Minh with many photos.

In the foreword of the book, the head of the China Diplomatic Writers Association Wang Chou praised President Ho as a great leader of the Vietnamese people and a close friend of the Chinese people.

Wang said the President had devoted all his life to national liberation and independence and stood side by side with the Chinese people in the most difficult time of its revolution.

"With a revolutionary spirit and an upright life, Ho Chi Minh is forever a bright example for us to follow," he said.

Circular issued on management of excavated, salvaged properties

HCM CITY — The Ministry of Finance has issued a building circular on a Government decree on the management of excavated or salvaged properties found in Viet Nam.

The decree 96/2009/ND-CP, which took effect on October 30, 2009, concerns the authority and liability of relevant agencies over the management of excavated or salvaged properties discovered by individuals or organisations.

Under the circular 88/2010/TT-BTC, the Government must set up a council to assess the value of properties, pay the fees for exploring, excavating and salvaging the properties, and disburse the value of the properties and reward the individuals or organisations that found the properties.

Any disbursement must be in accordance with current financial management regulations, according to the circular.

Many old ships have been found under the seas in the provinces of Ba Ria – Vung Tau, Kien Giang, Quang Nam, Binh Thuan, Ca Mau and others.

Many antiques salvaged from the ships have been transferred to national museums for management, preservation and display under regulations of the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. — VNS

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Vietnamese tunes to swing along to big jazz band

HA NOI — Popular Vietnamese songs will be presented in jazz arrangements by a big band led by the nation's leading jazz musician and impresario, Quyen Van Minh, in a concert in Ha Noi next Monday.

Tenor saxophone player Minh and his 16-piece band first performed Vietnamese songs in swing arrangements last April during the Jazz & Vietnamese Songs tour through Ha Noi, Hai Phong and HCM City. The shows were an initial experiment in combining Vietnamese and American music styles, said Minh, who is also the owner of Minh's Jazz Club in Ha Noi.

In addition to a programme of Vietnamese songs, the band in Monday's concert will perform such jazz standards as In the Mood, I've Got You under My Skin, and They Can't Take That Way from Me.

Guest artists will include singer Tung Duong, winner of the 2004 Sao Mai Diem Hen (Morningstar Rendezvous) singing contest, and Minh Bien, an amateur singer from HCM City.

"While Tung Duong is a very popular singer in Viet Nam, Minh Bien will be a surprise for audiences since he possesses a very good voice," Minh said.

The Monday's concert to be entitled Quyen Van Minh and Friends with Jazz will take place at the Ha Noi Opera House at 8pm. Tickets, priced at VND300-500,000, are available at the Opera House or at Minh's Jazz Club, 92 Tran Vu Street. — VNS

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Lady Borton: I'm an honest American woman

"It could be said that I'm simply an honest American woman." Lady Borton shared her feelings while talking to the "Chuyên đề An ninh thế giới" (World Security Newspaper) about war amongst other things.

Lady Borton is an American writer, journalist and charity activist, who has visited Vietnam many times. Borton has recently translated a number of works by President Ho Chi Minh, including " Vua di duong vua ke chuyen " (Stories told on the trail), into different languages. She is also author of the books " After sorrow: An American among the Vietnamese " and " Sensing the enemy: An American among the Vietnamese Boat people ".

Borton along with journalist and cultural researcher Huu Ngoc, compiled a number of bilingual reference books and also translated the books " Dien Bien Phu: Diem hen lich su " ( Dien Bien Phu: Rendezvous with Destiny ) by General Vo Nguyen Giap and " Tay Nguyen ngay ay " ( The Central Highlands: A North Vietnamese Journal of Life on the Ho Chi Minh Trail ).

Borton first came to Vietnam in 1969 and since then has returned to the country many times. She was present in Vietnam during historical times, right after the country regained its national independence in 1975, in her capacity as a member of a US organisation working for peace and as a member of an US education delegation. Occasionally, Borton visited Vietnam as a writer, a freelance journalist or a translator.

In her memory, during those days, Hanoi was at peace and there were very few cars. Whenever a car appeared in streets, it would belong to a minister or a foreigner. There were just bicycles and pedicabs, even wagons, on Hanoi 's roads which had few traffic lights. The local people had no telephones and led very poor lives. In the eyes of foreigners, Hanoi lacked everything.

Borton said that when she comes back to Hanoi nowadays, she feels surprised at the rapid changes. Hanoi is now much more modern, especially its communications networks. The city lacks nothing compared with other developing nations. In the past, there remained certain gaps in cultural exchanges with foreigners, but communicating with foreigners has now become popular. Hanoians have successfully upheld their age-old cultural traditions, while leading abundant and diverse lives. Whenever Borton came to Vietnam , she visited the Temple of Literature , which has preserved the cradle of Vietnamese first cultures.

When asked why she chose Vietnam as her destination, Borton said that she had worked for the peace movement during Vietnam 's war with America . The project provided medical equipment and medicines for the Vietnamese-German and Bach Mai Hospitals as well as local people, channelled through Cambodia . As a manager, Borton regularly met with Vietnamese people and felt their agonies during the war. She also thoroughly understood American losses during the war.

During her meetings with Vietnamese people, Borton made friends with many people, including journalist and culture researcher Huu Ngoc, the former Director of the World Publishing House, and people from the Vietnam Women's Union Central Committee and the Vietnam-US Society under the Vietnam Union of Friendship Organisations. With her love for Vietnam , the American writer has been teaching herself Vietnamese since 1969.

When talking about women's aspirations for happiness and peace, Borton said she is very fearful of war. In whatever family or country, people have a hatred for war as it brings cruel and terrible destruction. War means wives lose husbands, mothers lose children and people lose family members. In particular, the impact of Agent Orange (AO) on millions of people was terrible and bombs and mines left over from the war are still a big threat to people.

The writer said she used to be a member of non-governmental organisation against war no matter in what country it occurred, because one war always leads to another. For example, the US 's war in Vietnam ended in 1975, but its aftermath still exists. In fact, the US even imposed embargo on Vietnam , and backed the Khmer Rouge in an attempt to invade Vietnam 's southern region.

Borton said that the US government should admit the consequences of AO in Vietnam . Many young Americans were forced to serve and only a few of them voluntarily joined the army. A lot of them never came back, or were injured, or reported missing. "Being an honest American woman, I fell very painful about this. The war in Vietnam ended 35 years ago, but American's pain is still there," she said.

On returning to Vietnam this year, Borton said she was sickened by corruption regardless of what country it occurs in. The trafficking of women and children is also a stinging issue, while sending guest workers abroad needs to be carefully considered. On educational reforms, there remain many pressing matters such as private teaching and tuition and illegally collecting money from students.

While sharing what inspired her to translate President Ho Chi Minh's works into English, Borton said that she has read 12 books about President Ho Chi Minh during her trips to Vietnam and found that he was a politician, a diplomat, a poet and a man of culture.

During the war, the US government had taught Americans to hate communists. However, when Borton first came to Vietnam in 1969, she was very surprised when people who had followed the former regime also cried and were saddened when President Ho Chi Minh passed way. Borton gradually understood that Ho Chi Minh was a father and a great teacher to the Vietnamese people.

No State President in any country worldwide is informally called "Uncle". If Vietnam had not had President Ho Chi Minh, it would have found it hard to have a successful revolution. Ho Chi Minh's thoughts are "Unity, unity, great unity. Success, success, great success"; "Nothing is more precious than independence and freedom!" Ho Chi Minh's thoughts and actions for national independence and liberty are absolutely right. Vietnam was the first colonial nation in Southeast Asia to rise up and struggle for national independence. This posed a profound influence on the world movement for national liberation. Leaders from the US , France , the UK and the Netherlands respected Ho Chi Minh because of his influence.

Ho Chi Minh created a lot of ideological works that Borton would like to introduce to help international friends understand him and the Vietnamese people better. They include "Nhật ký trong tù" (Prison diary), "Bản án chế độ thực dân Pháp" (a Judgement on French colonisation), "Lời kêu gọi ton quốc kháng chiến" (the Appeal for national resistance), "Thư gửi cho đồng bào trong việc hon thành cải cách ruộng đất ở miền Bắc" (Letter to compatriots following land reforms in the North), "Thư chào mừng năm mới gửi nhân dân Mỹ" (New Year greetings to the American people (1966)) "Bản di chúc của Chủ tịch Hồ Chi Minh" (President Ho Chi Minh's testament).

"Whenever and wherever he was, Ho Chi Minh also placed friendship and solidarity amongst peoples first. He once said that the Vietnamese people would wage a protracted war of resistance to defend national independence," Borton concluded. - Vietnamplus

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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Friendship Association issues book about Ho Chi Minh

HCM CITY — The book Russians Talk about Ho Chi Minh was introduced at a meeting organised by the Russia-Viet Nam Friendship Association in HCM City this week.

The 160-page book written in Russian is a collection of stories and memoirs of 16 Russian writers, journalists and diplomats, who met President Ho Chi Minh from the 1920s to 1967.

In Russia, the book's debut was made at a ceremony to celebrate the 120th birthday of President Ho Chi Minh and to open the Ho Chi Minh Institute in Saint Petersburg on May 19.

"We're proud and happy that today the book is introduced to Vietnamese readers in the city named after Ho Chi Minh," the President of the Russia-Viet Nam Friendship Association, Vladimir Buiyanov, said.

"In Russia, the book helps readers better understand about President Ho's works and life, " he said.

The book also includes a number of photos of the President during various periods of his life.

Hong Kong all-male choir to perform fund-raiser in City

HCM CITY — The Hong Kong Welsh Male Voice Choir will return to HCM City for a special charity event Songs for a Brighter Future at the Caravelle Hotel today.

The choir will perform folk songs of Wales, following appearances from the Chamber Music Group of Tieng Duong Cam Company and a fashion show.

Founded in 1978 by a small group of expatriates in Hong Kong, the all-male choir has 70 amateur singers. Many of its performances are for charity fund-raising purposes.

In 2004 and 2008, the group performed in London's Royal Albert Hall, and in 2009, the choir sang from the Great Wall of China.

The choir performed for the first time in HCM City two years ago.

The charity event is organised by Sai Gon Children's Charity to raise funds for education of disadvantaged children.

The funds will be raised through both entrance ticket sales and sponsors. Tickets are VND1.5 million (US$75) per person.

Letter writing contest gets under way in Da Nang

DA NANG — A ceremony was held in the central city of Da Nang on Friday to mark the 136th World Post Day and to launch the 2011 Universal Postal Union International Letter Writing Contest.

The annual contest for children up to 15 years old aims to develop children's creative writing skills and help to strengthen friendships among nations, while giving young people an understanding of the postal sector's role in social development.

The contest has the theme, "imagine you are a tree in a forest, then write a letter explaining why it is important to protect forests" in response to the 2011 International Year of Forest.

The contest has been held in Vietnam 21 times since 1987, with eight school children winning prizes, including a first prize awarded to Ho Thi Hieu Hien from the Tay Son Secondary School in Da Nang's Hai Chau this year.

Hien received a certificate of merit and awards from the UPU, MoET, the Health Ministry and the HCMCYU. — VNS

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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Book on Ho Chi Minh’s life published in Cuba

Bac Ho
Late President Ho Chi Minh

A book on late President Ho Chi Minh has been published in the Spanish language in Cuba to celebrate the 50th anniversary of diplomatic ties between Cuba and Vietnam.

The book entitled “Memories of Uncle Ho”, written by Senior Lieutenant-General Phung The Tai, was published by the Jose Marti Publishing House.

Speaking at the ceremony to present the book, in Havana on September 7, Cuban reporter Marta Roja highlighted the milestones in President Ho’s life and work.

Roja, the last foreign reporter to interview President Ho before he passed away, said that President Ho was a pioneer during the struggle for freedom by colonized countries in Asia and Africa and the founder of the Vietnamese Democratic Republic, now the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. He was well-known for his statement “Nothing is more precious than independence and freedom”. He was the person who led the revolution to liberate the Vietnamese people and ensured their victory over foreign aggressors.

The 2,000 copies of the book that the Jose Marti Publishing House have printed will help young Latin American people, particularly avid Cuban readers to better understand President Ho Chi Minh.

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