Showing posts with label country. Show all posts
Showing posts with label country. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Northern natural beauty, traditions call out to adventurous travellers

by Chieu Anh

Pristine sands: An aerial view of Tra Co Beach. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

Pristine sands: An aerial view of Tra Co Beach. — VNS Photos Truong Vi

Test of time:  Tra Co Church was built in 1880. It is a massive structure decorated with beautiful reliefs. It houses an 80-year-old bell.

Test of time: Tra Co Church was built in 1880. It is a massive structure decorated with beautiful reliefs. It houses an 80-year-old bell.

What do you think of when you read the fol-lowing lines about Viet Nam by the famous Vietnamese poet To Huu:

How amazing my country is!

Lean against Truong Son Mountain Range

Reach to Truong Sa (Spratly) Islands

From north-eastern most Tra Co with populous forest

To southernmost Ca Mau with mangroves

If you are a traveller cherishing your exploration of the country, you will most likely share the same impressions with your family and friends when you talk about your experience enjoying the beauty of Viet Nam.

Let's start the journey from Tra Co, a beautiful beach in the country's northeastern most province, Quang Ninh.

The winding road to Tra Co doesn't dissuade visitors from continuing the journey thanks to sweeping views of the beautiful landscape. Travellers can also go to Tra Co by boat from Hai Phong or from Bai Chay, another coastal city in Quang Ninh Province.

The locality is endowed with a 17km-long coast line and beautiful beaches from Sa Vy to Mui Ngoc. The full length is one of the most attractive beaches in Viet Nam.

While Nha Trang Beach attracts visitors with its beauty reminiscent of a chic modern girl, Tra Co beach looks like a country girl because its beauty has not been altered from its natural state by development.

The wild beauty of Tra Co allows people to enjoy the peaceful and slow flow of life in the province. Taking a stroll along the white-sand beach, listening to the sound of waves crashing, and freeing your mind as you look up at the immense blue sky and the never-ending sea is a simple and enjoyable way to pass the day.

There are four seasons in Tra Co with comfortable temperatures throughout, neither too hot in the summer nor too cold in the winter. The average temperature is about 220C, going up to about 26-280C in summer. In the moderate heat of summer, the cool and clean sea water beckons to would-be swimmers and waters sports enthusiasts.

Visitors are recommended to wake early one morning to travel the 6km to Con Mang to watch the immense red flame of the sun slowly rising to welcome the day. Likewise, as the day wanes they can find a place to relax along the beach to enjoy the sunset. Lovers and groups of friends alike will find enjoyment as they share in the quiet beauty of the pristine sands and feel their souls mesh in harmony with nature and escape from the troubles and sounds of daily life.

Not far from Con Mang is Sa Vy, the country's northeastern most point, where people can look out across neighbouring China. At Sa Vy point, visitors can pose for a photo next to three popular tree-shaped sculptures. Lines from the poem by To Huu are posted on it.

Another worthy stopping point is Tra Co Church, an old piece of architecture built in 1880. It is a massive structure decorated with beautiful reliefs and an 80-year-old bell. In 1995, the damaged reliefs were restored, returning the structure to its original glory.

The nearby Tra Co Temple is another popular destination which is the pride of the local people. It was built in the 15th century but has gone through some changes over time. However, its typical architectural and decorative features have been maintained.

Villagers worship their ancestors at the temple. According to legend, the ancestors were originally from the northern coastal town of Do Son (Hai Phong City now) and migrated to Tra Co more than 600 years ago.

Six ancestors in particular are still worshipped here for their great contributions to the establishment of the village.

Vietnamese style

Tra Co Temple features typical Vietnamese artchitectural style. Although it was built in a border area with China and could easily have included features from the country's northern neighbour, the style is distinctly Vietnamese, confirming that the Vietnamese people have long respected their national cultural identity.

After nearly 600 years, the temple still sits as the witness to the country's ups and downs and acts as a vivid story teller who helps generations of Vietnamese learn more about their traditions.

Tra Co Temple is similar in style to many others in the Hong (Red) River Delta. Decorations include various patterns of four supernatural creatures including dragons, unicorns, tortoises and phoenixes, along with God and humans.

The temple inspired Vietnamese composer Nguyen Cuong to write the song Mai Dinh Lang Bien (Temple Roof in Coastal Village) that has left a deep impression in the souls of many Vietnamese people.

Historian Do Van Ninh said that Tra Co Temple proves the territorial expansion process of the Vietnamese and the connection between the border coastal area with other areas of the country.

Annual festival

People visiting Tra Co during late lunar May and early June can take the opportunity to join in the village's annual festival. From May 30 to June 6 a variety of activities are held to celebrate the village.

Prior to the festival, on May 25, a festive procession from Tra Co begins a return journey to the original hometown of Do Son to honour the ancestors there. It takes them about three days by boat to make the trip to the hometown but only two days to return. They belive that the festive procession can travel faster thanks to support from the ancestors.

On the night of May 30, the temple is bright with candles, lights and smells of burning incense. Locals come to pray for health, wealth and a properous year.

The following morning, a ceremony to escort the King to sea takes place. Dozens of people donned in traditional attire join the procession, some playing musical instruments and others holding colourful flags or weapons. A crowd of people follow creating an exciting atmosphere.

During the festival, the village also hosts activities such as a cooking competition where people can enjoy local specialities, and dancing competitions.

The ritual has been preserved for hundreds of years, consistently enriching the spiritual life of the coastal village residents.

One tourist from Ha Noi, who enjoyed the festival during a holiday to Tra Co, said that she was very impressed by the way the locals preserved their traditions.

"Their performance at the festival helped me learn more about Vietnamese culture, especially the culture in a coastal areas," she said. — VNS

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Fireworks, festivals ring in new year

Day in the sun: Many pilgrims flock to Yen Tu site in the northern province of Quang Ninh to attend the spring festival and pray for good fortune in the new year. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Tran

Day in the sun: Many pilgrims flock to Yen Tu site in the northern province of Quang Ninh to attend the spring festival and pray for good fortune in the new year. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Tran

The sand flies: A wrestling competition in the traditional festival of Mai Dong Village, Hoang Mai District, Ha Noi, on the occasion of new year. — VNA/VNS Photo Nhat Anh

The sand flies: A wrestling competition in the traditional festival of Mai Dong Village, Hoang Mai District, Ha Noi, on the occasion of new year. — VNA/VNS Photo Nhat Anh

HCM CITY — Splendid displays of fireworks and traditional festivities animated the country during the first week of February to welcome Tet (Lunar New Year), which falls under the zodiac sign of the Cat.

On New Year's Eve, when the Cat takes over rule from the Tiger, fireworks lit up the sky across the country.

A 15-minute display of fireworks entertained various ethnic groups in the capital of the northernmost province of Ha Giang, while fireworks were accompanied by a count-down concert in Dien Bien Phu city in northwestern province of Dien Bien, which borders Laos.

Fireworks in Ha Giang were made possible with funding from local enterprises rather than from the provincial budget, according to Hung Thi Hong, a senior provincial official.

This year's Tet Holiday coincided with the 81st anniversary of the Communist Party of Viet Nam and followed a successful Party Congress, the country's premier political event which takes place every five years.

Thousands of locals, including elderly people and children took to the streets in spite of chilly weather to view a fireworks display at the sports arena in northern Ninh Binh Province.

A fireworks display was also staged in Thu Dau Mot Town and every district of southern Binh Duong Province, while provincial party chief Mai The Trung headed a delegation to pay New Year's visits to soldiers, police officers and workers of state-owned enterprises.

Trees and houses lining downtown streets in northern Nam Dinh City, were decorated in red with thousands of flags and flower lanterns, and artists of traditional opera like cheo and cai luong performed classical dramas in colourful costumes during the New Year's Eve.

The sun finally emerged after many days of a severe cold spell.

Droves of people thronged into Buddhist pagodas and temples in Ha Noi to pray for a happy new year and the well-being of their families, and streets surrounding the Temple of Literature were lined with calligraphy stalls where calligraphy-painted Chinese characters representing "Luck" and "Happiness" were on sale.

In HCM City, downtown avenues like Nguyen Hue and Le Loi have become traditional magnets that drew thousands of revelers during Tet with colourful arrangement of flowers and decorations.

The city's Party leader Le Thanh Hai joined the revelers on the avenue on Sunday and tossed a coin into a lake to wish for peace and prosperity for citizens.

"I'm so glad that the city has made great changes in the past years," said Nguyen Van Dac, an overseas Vietnamese in the US who returned to the country for the first time after 15 years.

In the world heritage town of Hoi An in central Quang Nam Province, lanterns in various shapes of the cat made by local craftsmen, lit up both sides of the Hoai River that runs through the town.

Farmers in the Mekong Delta took to rice paddy fields on Saturday, the third day of Tet, in a symbolic deed to wish for good crops. — VNS

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Hip-hop steps up in monthly contest

Upside down: Big Toe dance crew performs. — VNS File Photo

Upside down: Big Toe dance crew performs. — VNS File Photo

HA NOI — A hip-hop contest will be organised every month for dancers throughout the country in preparation for a final round at the end of next year, according to Nguyen Viet Thanh, head of the Southeast Asia hip hop champion crew 2010, Big Toe.

Thanh said that the move was aimed at creating opportunities for hip hop lovers throughout the country to practise, compete and enhance their dancing skills and develop the Vietnamese hip hop movement.

The first monthly contest was held on Sunday in Ha Noi, drawing 66 dancers from across the country who competed directly in a knock-out format. The judges included members of Ha Noi-based Big Toe namely Nguyen Anh Duc, Bui Manh Thang and Nguyen Manh Nam.

Thanh hoped to invite foreign dancers to join the judges for the final round.

"We want to develop hip hop as a healthy way for Vietnamese youths to express their characters," he said. "The final winners will compete as Viet Nam's representatives at an international competition."

Big Toe won the Battle of the Year (BOTY) Southeast Asia in Singapore in October this year to earn the 10-member dance team tickets to France to compete at the BOTY International Final 2010 in November.

Founded in 1992 when hip hop first arrived in Viet Nam with just seven members, the crew has grown to 60, and won national and international acclaim.

BOTY is an international competition for break-dancers. Each region or country will have one representative at the BOTY International Final in France. — VNS

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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Monthly hip hop contest to be held

HA NOI -- A hip hop contest would be organised every month for dancers throughout the country in preparation for a final round at the end of next year, according to Nguyen Viet Thanh, head of the Southeast Asia hip hop champion crew 2010, Big Toe.

Thanh said that the move was aimed at creating opportunities for hip hop lovers throughout the country to practise, compete and enhance their dancing skills and develop the Vietnamese hip hop movement.

The first monthly contest was held on Sunday in Ha Noi, drawing 66 dancers from across the country who competed directly in a knock-out format. The judges included members of Ha Noi-based Big Toe including Nguyen Anh Duc, Bui Manh Thang and Nguyen Manh Nam.

Thanh hoped to invite foreign dancers to join the judges for the final round.

"We want to develop hip hop as a healthy way for Vietnamese youths to express their characters," he said, "The final winners will compete as Viet Nam's representatives at an international competition."

Big Toe, won the Battle of the Year (BOTY) Southeast Asia in Singapore in October this year to earn the 10 member dance team tickets to France to compete at the BOTY International Final 2010 in November.

Founded in 1992 when hip hop first arrived in Viet Nam with just seven members, the crew has grown to 60, and has won national and international acclaim.

BOTY is an international competition for break-dancers. Each region or country will have one representative at the BOTY International Final in France. - VNS

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Thursday, August 19, 2010

Display celebrates heroic Ha Noi

Call to arms: Barricades against French forces on a Ha Noi street in January 1947 in a photo taken by Nguyen Ba Khoan on show at an exhibition in Ha Noi.

Call to arms: Barricades against French forces on a Ha Noi street in January 1947 in a photo taken by Nguyen Ba Khoan on show at an exhibition in Ha Noi.

HA NOI — An exhibition at the Ho Chi Minh Museum celebrates Ha Noi's heroic struggle for independence, peace and reunification last century.

On display are more than 200 documents, pictures and objects, many of them for the first time, designed to give visitors an insight into the country's struggles during President Ho Chi Minh's life and the subsequent years that saw military victory against the US and the reunification of the country.

The exhibition is divided into three parts.

The first features famous quotations, and maps and pictures of old Ha Noi that strive to capture the ancient city's elegance, refinement and beauty during its struggle for independence from colonial France.

Many documents and pictures celebrate the fearless determination of the people of Ha Noi to overcome their colonial oppressors.

The second part of the exhibition covers the period during the American war of destruction against North Viet Nam. It bids to depict Ha Noi as the spiritual capital of the country.

Ha Noi established itself as a centre of socialist construction while helping the rest of the country fight US forces.

The last part of the exhibition portrays Ha Noi as the City for Peace, the titled bestowed by UNESCO.

In 1975, Viet Nam gained total independence. Ha Noi then set about healing the wounds of war. Pictures reflect the capital's socio-economic development and urban renewal.

A visitor from Germany said the exhibition had helped him see the war from a different perspective.

"I often see documents and pictures of the war in Viet Nam through information sources of the US, but this is the first time I have seen the country and its capital through documents in Viet Nam," he said.

The National Archives Centre, the Ho Chi Minh Museum, the Party Central Committee's Archival Office and the Ha Noi Central Archives have organised the exhibition to mark Ha Noi's 1,000th year.

The exhibition will run until October. — VNS

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