Showing posts with label Minh City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minh City. 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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Friday, February 11, 2011

Ticket sale to Backstreet Boys concert announced

Tickets for Backstreet Boys Concert Tour “This is Us” in Vietnam will be available officially from February 12 with prices ranging from VND500,000 (US$25) to VND2 million, according to the tour’s organizer Water Buffalo Productions.

Fans can buy tickets at official ticket outlets in Ho Chi Minh City  and Hanoi (mentioned in the box below), or book online at http://www.bsb.com.vn/bookticket.html, or call 1900 6604 (Hanoi) or 1900 6608 (HCMC) for phone booking and ticket delivery.

Backstreet Boys is scheduled to perform in Ho Chi Minh City-based Military Zone 7's stadium on March 24 and grace Hanoi's My Dinh national stadium two days later.

According to the organizer, a total of 55,000 tickets for the two performances will be sold in Vietnam.

A 30-strong technical and support team is expected to accompany the band.

The band consisting of four members A. J. McLean, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell, Nick Carter and Kevin Richardson, was formed in Orlando, Florida in 1993.

They rose to fame with their debut international album, Backstreet Boys in 1996.

They reached to superstardom with their album Millennium in 1999 and its follow-up album, Black & Blue one year later.

Richardson left the group in 2006 to pursue other interests, leaving the band as a four-piece, but the remaining members did not rule out a possible return of the singer.

The Backstreet Boys have sold over 130 million records worldwide, making them one of the biggest selling artists of all time.

According to Billboard, they are the first group since Sade to have their first seven albums reach the top 10 on the Billboard 200. 

backstreet Boys

Hanoi’s five ticket outlets:

- Megastar Cineplex Vincom City Tower
- 11B Tran Quoc Toan
- 20 Phan Dình Phung
- My Dinh National Stadium
- VIT Tower – 519 Kim Ma

HCMC’s ticket offices:

- 75 Pasteur Road, District 1.
- Nguyen Du Galaxy Cinema – 116 Nguyen Du
- Tan Binh Galaxy Cinema – 246 Nguyen Hong Dao, Ward 14, Tan Binh District.
- Megastar Cineplex Parkson – Level 10, Parkson Plaza, 60A Truong Son, Tan Binh

Hai Phong and Bien Hoa's ticket outlets: 

Tickets can be purchased at any Megastar branch.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Ho Chi Minh City bookworms rummage festival

Around 150,000 people visited the first-ever Book Road Festival organized in Ho Chi Minh City from January 31 to February 6 during the Lunar New Year.

Located on Mac Thi Buoi, a side street connecting Dong Khoi with the heavy-trafficked Nguyen Hue flower road in District 1, it was filled with people from morning until late at night.

A Q&A session with four writers Do Thi Thanh Binh, Le Thi Kim, Bui Chi Vinh, and Pham Sy Sau on Sunday morning attracted a large audience, some of whom stayed longer than expected to get a chance to talk to the famous writers.

The festival also provided a special area for children to read books and color drawings, which proved a huge attraction with kids.

People looking for rare books published before the Renovation period could exchange or buy them at a stall put up by the city’s General Science Library, some for merely VND10,000 (50 US cents).

“At first, we did not think we would be able to sell many books during Tet but it turned out people in HCMC bought a lot,” said Tu Ha, a cashier for a bookstall at the event.

“Books on Buddhism, culture, and philosophy; works by famous authors like Tran Dan and To Hoai; and translated items by well-known publishers like Nha Nam, Tri Thuc, and Dong A, were in great demand.”

Fahasa, the biggest book distributor in the country, reported sales worth VND500 million (US$ 25,500) during the week.

“This is a success [at the festival in the city with population of 8 million]. Next year perhaps we can seek a larger area, a larger street to organize the festival,” Le Manh Ha, director of the city’s Information and Communication Department, said.

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Thursday, January 27, 2011

Cai luong legend dies from infections

Reformed theater (cai luong) actor Tan Tai was gone at 6:00am Thursday at the age of 73 at his private house in Ho Chi Minh City after a long time suffering from bile duct infections.

Le Tan Tai – his full name – was born in 1938 at Vinh Trach Commune, Nui Sap District, Long Xuyen Town, An Giang Province.

Best known for his melodious and sweet voice for a man, Tan Tai had been a teacher before choosing reformed theater acting as his career.

He started by joining the Buom Vang (Yellow Butterfly) troupe in 1959. After 4 years, Tan Tai became its main actor and then won a gold medal in a prestigious cai luong competition named ‘Thanh Tam Awards’ thanks to his leading role as Diep Nhut Lang in a play called Cat Dung Phuong Tu performed in 1963.

He was also the main actor for other renowned theater companies in former Saigon like Thu Do, Da Ly Huong, and Kim Chung. Some of the classic plays starring Tan Tai include Khoi Song Tieu Suong, Bong Hong Sa Mac, Co Gai Do Long, Anh Hung Xa Dieu, Tieng Vong Ba Deo, Vo Tong Sat Tau, Suong Mu Tren Non Cao, to name but a few.

He was crowned ‘the Emperor of plastic discs’ after recording more than 400 discs of cai luong plays and thousands of nostalgic songs in the 1960s. His recordings sold like hot cakes and he even earned up to 1 gold tael (a record high at the moment) for each of the discs released then.

Recently, he took part in several cai luong performances and organized his first live show in January 2009 entitled ‘Dem tri an’ (A Night for Gratitude) at the Hung Dao theater in the southern metropolitan to mark his 50 years being part of the Vietnamese artistic form.

His children include Tan Beo and Tan Bo who are now among the most favorite comedians in Vietnam.

Tan Tai’s funeral will be held at his private house at 109 Nguyen Duy Street, Ward 9, District 8.

He will be buried at the Chua Nghe Si cemetery in Go Vap District , Ho Chi Minh City at 8:00 am on January 31.

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Giant flying cat to herald New Year

A manned hot air balloon 18m in diameter with the face of a smiling cat will rise high on the New Year Eve February 2 in downtown Ho Chi Minh City to welcome the Year of the Cat.

The balloon, which is to be piloted, will fly 50 meters high from District 1’s 23/9 Park near the iconic Ben Thanh market.

The aerostat measures 22 meters tall, 18 meters in diameter and 2,000 cubic meters in volume.

Visitors can see and photograph the balloon from February 3-6 at 7AM-9AM30 and 17PM-20PM30.

Before taking flight, the balloon’s wicker basket will open to take in written notes from visitors and passers-by. Their messages of hope and love will surely fly high.

Established 7 years ago, Ho Chi Minh- based Chien Thang Company who designs and produces the balloon participated in many cultural festivals throughout the country as well as business campaigns.

It also employs the first hot air balloon flight crew in Vietnam.

Fireworks dazzle the city

Ho Chi Minh City also announced it will hold firework displays in 9 spots spreading over 9 districts of the city to welcome the new year.

The displays start the same time at midnight February 2 and will last fifteen minutes.

High-altitude fireworks will be set off at the Caric Shipbuilding Factory in District 2, District 7’s Administrative Center project site in District 7, Go Vap Cultural Park project site in Go Vap District, Hoc Mon District’s Nga Ba Giong Memorial Temple in, and Ben Duoc Memorial Temple in Cu Chi District.

The four other displays, at a slightly lower height, will be at the National Culture and History Park in District 9, District 11’s Dam Sen Cultural Park, Mau Than 1968 Memorial Temple in Binh Chanh Districts and Can Gio District.

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Monday, January 24, 2011

HCMC’s river tour launched

The first river tour of Ho Chi Minh City started Saturday, taking tourists from Bach Dang Wharf in District 1 to the Painter Village in District 7.

The latest move is part of HCMC’s effort to diversify tourism products.

The tour is one of several river tours on the Saigon River which the city’s tourism department surveyed last November, to make river tourism one of the key products to enrich the city’s hospitality industry.

Last year, the city's tourism department and travel agencies made fact-finding trips up the Sai Gon River to Dong Nai Province.

The tourism department was also asked to develop river tours from HCMC to neighboring provinces, the Mekong provinces of An Giang and Cambodia.

HCMC is looking to attract 3.5 million international tourists this year, up from last year’s 3.1 million.

The city’s tourism sector last year generated total revenue of VND41 trillion (US$2.1 billion), and the figure is expected to increase to VND49 trillion this year.

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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

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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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Famed comedian Kim Ngoc dies of stroke

Kim Ngoc, a famous actress and an iconic standup comedian for decades, passed away at 11:30 am Sunday at the age of 68 after a sudden stroke at her private house in Ho Chi Minh City.

Kim Ngoc was born into a poor family selling pig meats in a market in District 2. When she was young, she had to work hard to help her mother bring up 14 siblings.

She started her career as a Cai Luong (reformed theatre) singer and was nicknamed “fiend Kim Ngoc” for her brilliant talent.

As Cai Luong has not become much popular in the country’s showbiz, Kim Ngoc along with her son - comedian and actor Hieu Hien - set up a “Mother and child” comedy team to perform on stages across the country.

They have won the audience’s heart through plays like “Hoa hau vu tru” (Miss Universe), Bà ngoại thời @” (Grandmother of @ era), “Câu chuyện cái tivi” (A story of a Television), and some others.

Although she had witnessed ups and downs in life, she had a deep passion for arts and always tried her best to perform great performances, bringing happiness and smiles to the audience. She was loved by her colleagues, neighbors and fans thanks to her kindness, enthusiasm, and humor.

Kim Ngoc’s funeral will be held at his private house at C9/4B10 Pham Hung Street, Binh Hung Ward, Binh Chanh District. She will be buried at the Linh Son Tu Pagoda in District 9, Ho Chi Minh City at 6:00 pm on January 21.

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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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Sunday, October 24, 2010

New culture show to lure visitors to HCMC

Starting this December, locals and tourists will have a chance to experience a cultural show organized by the Xin Chao Art performance Co. Ltd, featuring cultural traits of Vietnam to attract tourists.

Entitled “Xin Chao” (Hello), the premier with 50 artists will kick off on December 3 and will continue every night at 6.30pm at the Ho Chi Minh City Circus Theater at September 23 Park in District 1. Sunday shows are meant for kids and family with discount fares.

There will be three parts featuring the tale of Lac Long Quan and his wife Au Co, who are believed to be the first ancestors of Vietnam, heroines Trung Sisters and the contemporary life in Vietnam.

“Xin Chao” is the same genre as Cirque du Soleil, a dramatic mix of circus arts and performances originated from Canada that has been widely spread to Japan and Macau.

The script is written by Laura Burke, an American producer and director who have been living, working and researching on Vietnamese culture and history over the last 8 years. She has also participated in different art activities such as her recent staging a traditional musical show called Ho Xuan Huong at HCMC’s Opera House.

For this new project, Laura expects to employ Binh Dinh martial art and Vietnamese traditional and cultural habits into the show to attract international audience.

This is also a chance for young artists in different fields like circus, martial arts, aerobat and dancing to show off their talents in a big stage for long term.

“There are many tourists coming to HCMC every year. However, they are only hanging around bar, cinema or restaurant because there is no entertainment place with Vietnamese culture,” said Augustus Greaves, representative of the show.

“Vietnam is a beautiful country with a rich culture. We need to exploit the cultural traits to attract tourists and they will spend more and have more reasons to stay in Vietnam.”

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Monday, September 27, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

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Saturday, September 25, 2010

HCMC street ushers in fine dining options

They say that British colonizers left their former ‘assets’ with railways, while the French left bread and coffee. The quip is intended to be derisive, pointing to superior British planning and nation-building. But Ho Chi Minh City’s foodies may well disagree.

This city of seven or so million is thankful for the culinary tradition the French left. Along with the one million or so Chinese immigrants, the southern spicier take on Vietnamese food and the multitude of cuisines that have sprung up around the city over the last decade of rampant economic growth, Ho Chi Minh City has become a Mecca for lovers of fine food.

Among the most popular streets for food lovers in the southern melting pot are the small, narrow and quiet streets of Ngo Van Nam, Le Thanh Ton, Suong Nguyet Anh in District 1 and Nguyen Thi Dieu, Le Ngo Cat and Le Quy Don in District 3.

The secret of their success could well lie in the three features they share, Sai Gon Tiep Thi (Sai Gon Marketing) newspaper reported.

They are all located near downtown but with less traffic and a wide variety of local and international dishes available at countless roadside restaurants, bars and coffee shops.

Le Quy Don is among the latest destinations to enter the list of popular food streets in the southern hub.

Within the last 12 months, countless restaurants, bars and café have been sprung up on the quiet street, luring customers from across the country to the small area for a change of scenery and new dinning experiences.

Opened in 1992, Cay Tre (Bamboo) Restaurant charms customers as a throwback Vietnamese garden villa.

The humble eatery which can serve up to 100 guests a time offers a wide range of traditional Vietnamese food ranging from simple, inexpensive daily treats to fancier dishes like chicken cooked in clay pots and hot pot made from seafood and flowers.

Seafood lovers can also head for Ngoc Suong Restaurant for some of its renowned specialties of fish salad, seafood spring rolls and raw oysters.

“Le Quy Don was a quiet street with little light and few people passing by,” Ngoc Cuong, marketing director of the restaurant, said when recalling when Ngoc Suong first opened its doors in 1996.

Pricey Au Manoir De Khai also found a place in an old villa at the corner of Le Quy Don and Dien Bien Phu Street and serves up well-to-do locals with a premium French dining experience.

Residents living on the street soon found their homes surrounded with a bevy of dinning options, from the most luxurious dishes to bizarre delicacies of ethnic minorities.

More menu options at the street’s eateries also mean new clientele.

A few years ago, most restaurants only attracted businessmen and expats but the venues nowadays are packed with office workers and young, hip locals.

The high concentration eateries and coffee shops on the small streets has also motivated the business owners to look for more menu options, services, new targeted customers and improve the venues’ designs to compete with their next-door rivals.

Nha Toi (My House) Restaurant takes pride in its barbecue dishes while Red Tile Restaurant lures diners with its collection of rare delicacies from rural areas of Cambodia such as mouse and dried fish and catfish from Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

The increasing number of food streets like Le Quy Don is, after all, a part of HCMC’s booming food industry where people are know for their love of food and their willingness to spend to prove it.
 

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Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Vietnam's minority Chams cling to Muslim faith

cham-woman
A Cham Muslim woman and her grand-daughter walk outside a mosque in Ho Chi Minh City.
Photo: AFP

The call to prayer from the minaret reaches out over tightly-packed alleys in a Ho Chi Minh City neighborhood as men in white knitted skullcaps and colorful sarongs walk to their local mosque.

The scene is more reminiscent of Malaysia, Indonesia or Brunei -- not Vietnam and its Chinese-influenced culture where Muslims are a tiny fraction of the population.

This small community in an area known as District 8 says it is the largest enclave of Cham Muslims in the metropolis informally still known as Saigon.

It has more than 1,300 residents, halal restaurants, a large mosque and a madrassa that regularly sends students to Malaysia for further study.

These and other Cham communities in southern and central Vietnam are all that remain of the Champa kingdom that ruled for centuries.

There are more than 100,000 Chams in the Buddhist-dominated country of 86 million, the government says.

"The Cham fell and lost their country. I feel like I live in another country and it's not my home," says a noodle-seller who gave her name only as Hachot, 49.

The Cham were a Hindu people who ruled parts of south and central Vietnam for hundreds of years and gradually converted to Islam.

But by the late 15th century the Vietnamese had pushed south and Champa was in decline.

Today, the kingdom's most visible legacy is the My Son temple ruin near Danang city. It is a UNESCO world heritage site and popular with tourists.

These days more than 80 percent of Cham are adherents of Islam, researchers say.

According to government data, Muslims are the smallest of six major religious groups in the country, with Buddhism the largest.

Religious activity remains under state control in Vietnam but worship among a variety of faiths is flourishing. However, the Muslims have kept a lower profile than Catholics and Buddhists.

"We just follow this religion. We don't care about politics," says Haji Mou-sa, 52, deputy manager of the local madrassa. He is fluent in Malay and knows some Arabic.

Mou-sa says Ho Chi Minh City has more than a dozen imams, all trained in Vietnam. Foreign imams also visit, especially from Malaysia, and the Koran has been translated into Vietnamese.

A slight man in a collarless shirt, sarong, and metal-rimmed glasses, he has lived in District 8 since the 1960s, when Chams first began moving to the area.

Many came from the Mekong Delta province of An Giang, where Chau Doc city is still home to a significant Cham Muslim population.

In the beginning, the District 8 Cham homes were made from wood and thatch. Electricity came to the area in 1990, and much later a bridge was built connecting the once-isolated area to downtown, leading to improved roads and rapid development of the surrounding area.

According to residents, there are 16 mosques in Ho Chi Minh City, some of them built with assistance from Muslim nations.

A plaque in the Cham neighborhood's Masjid Jamiul Anwar says it was rebuilt in 2006 with funds from the United Arab Emirates and the Red Crescent.

Although they get support from the Middle East, Cham relations remain strongest with Malaysia and Indonesia, thanks partly to shared cultural and religious values.

"Malaysians came here and supported schools and better jobs," Hachot recalls. The ties started more than 20 years ago after Vietnam began a policy of gradual economic openness.

She says she does not feel a part of wider Vietnamese society, even though the government helped to rebuild her house some years ago.

Attitudes of the majority Kinh ethnic group towards the Cham vary, Hachot says.

"Some Kinh say the Cham are dirty," she says, and they object to the Muslims' shunning of pork. "Other people don't care."

Many older Muslim residents make pilgrimages to Mecca, and most Cham have Arabic names on their government-issued identity cards.

Mohamath Zukry, 22, moved from his small town in An Giang more than 18 months ago to study and live at the madrassa. He plans to go to Malaysia to finish his religious education, and to study information technology.

Less devout Mack Aly, 29, a real estate agent who lives outside the Cham neighbourhood, says he still enjoys an alcoholic drink with his friends, and dates a non-Muslim woman.

"In Vietnam religion is not so strong. I won't eat pork. But I don't pray five times a day. And I drink and smoke," he explains at an upscale coffee shop.

Aly and his family have taken advantage of the opportunities offered by the Muslim diaspora. His brother works in Egypt and his sister in Indonesia.

Headscarves, long skirts and sleeves are common in Cham neighborhoods but women leave their heads uncovered when they go to work, and may opt for jeans. They say this is partly out of a fear of discrimination by co-workers.

Ngo Van Dong, 50, is among a small number of Kinh who have converted, despite initial opposition from his family who thought the religion "weird." The mechanic says he adopted Islam more out of love for his Cham wife than religious piety. Over time, he came to understand his adopted faith better.

Like their fellow Muslims around the world, the Cham in District 8 are marking the holy fasting month of Ramadan until about September 9.

They commonly also enjoy Vietnam's biggest celebration, the Tet Lunar New Year in February, although they do not engage in the spiritual rituals that accompany it.

"But we still have fun," says Dong.

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