Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Friday, October 1, 2010

Football final party raises VND40 million for kids to swim

Football supporters back their teams at last Saturday' AFL Grand Final Party in Saigon organized by the Vietnam Swans. A rematch party will be held this Saturday in District 2 - Photo: Courtesy of Vietnam Swans
When the Vietnam Swans held their AFL Grand Final parties last Saturday the only winners were the kids in Hoi An who will benefit from the money raised to teach them how to swim.

The Grand Final match was a shock 68-68 draw between the two inner city Melbourne teams, Collingwood and St Kilda, and everybody left feeling as deflated as a flat football. But the kids in Hoi An cleaned up.

The party at La Cantine in HCMC’s District 1 had 242 footy fans and raised VND30 million for the Tri Bob Swimming Program for kids in Hoi An, while the party for the final in Hanoi with 150 attendees raised VND10 million. The swimming program was started because more kids drown in Central Vietnam than die in road accidents.

Phil Johns the Swans National President said the first thing that came to his mind when the teams drew was, “Oh my God, it was so exhausting organizing this party… How are we going to organize another party for next week’s rematch.”

He said despite it being a great match the draw result was a massive anticlimax for supporters of both teams, who both had good reasons to think their team was going to clinch it in the end. Johns said Collingwood had control of the most of the match but their poor goal kicking was very costly.

Johns and the crew have organized another party this Saturday at 10 a.m. at a different venue in Saigon while the Saigon Swan team members in Hanoi will hold it again at Jaspas, fourth floor Hanoi Towers, 49 Hai Ba Trung..

Everyone is invited to join the Grand Final Redux Party in Saigon at LesudGaudir, 4 Thao Dien Street, District 2.

Johns said the Redux Party will be chilled out with free entry and pay as you go prices. Dress casually in your team colors and bring your bathers if you want to jump into the pool.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Children with disabilities enjoy rare a night out

by Ngoc Le

Fun for everyone: Children with disabilities join in a lantern parade  during a Mid-Autumn Festival party at the Disability Resource and Development centre in HCM City. — VNS Photo Ngoc Le

Fun for everyone: Children with disabilities join in a lantern parade during a Mid-Autumn Festival party at the Disability Resource and Development centre in HCM City. — VNS Photo Ngoc Le

HCM CITY — If anyone thinks that a barrier exists between children with disabilities and those who have none, they are mistaken.

In fact, most children see those with disabilities as potential friends with whom they can have fun.

On Sunday, a gathering of around 100 kids testified to this feeling.

The evening gathering was held as part of Tet Trung Thu (Mid-Autumn Festival), which is a children's festival and falls on the full-moon day of the eighth lunar month.

The gathering took place in the yard of a mansion in District 10 where the Disability Resource and Development is based. The DRD (Doi Rat Dep) is a local non-governmental organisation providing support to disadvantaged people.

Visually and hearing-impaired, mentally impaired and autistic children mingled with others from nearby neighbourhoods in District 10's Ward 12. They ranged in age from five to 13.

The enclosed yard was fully packed with children. Their boisterous laughter enlivened the space, while their hands were gesticulating wildly.

The kids also spilled onto the passage in the front, which was roofed to provide more space for kids during a lantern-making competition.

They were divided into 20 groups of five and provided with bamboo frames, cellophane of various colours, rayon, scissors and glue to build their own lanterns.

Twenty colourful lanterns of different shapes, most of them lovely animals like rabbit, peacock, swan, bird along with stars and flowers, were hung up in the air after they were completed.

"I wish that all of my friends were as gorgeous as swans in the Mid-Autumn Eve," explained one member of a group, describing the significance of their works to the jury.

All of the kids in the groups held conferences to discuss the significance of their lanterns, according to Nguyen Thi Loi, a fourth-year student specialising in social work at the University of Social Sciences and Humanities.

"We just gave them some hints, like what a flower or heart means," she said.

Loi and dozens of other volunteer students were assigned to supervise and support groups of kids.

"It takes them from one to two hours to complete the lanterns," she observed. "Some hearing-impaired kids are craftier than their other peers."

Most of the difficult parts of the job were done by those without disabilities, while the others did simple things like paint a little bit on cellophane or clean up garbage.

Some parts of the work required collaboration. One kid kept the frame steady for another to glue cellophane, and another kept cellophane stretched for the other to cut into different shapes.

Even though they found it hard to communicate with each other, they tried to express themselves or ask for scissors or glue through gestures.

At times when disputes emerged, they made concessions.

"Some of them liked different colours, and finally they used all colours on their lantern," said Loi.

"Even normal adults like us would find it hard to make lanterns, let alone kids with disabilities," she said, when asked why kids were provided with completed frames rather than separate bamboo sticks.

A flower lantern represented the children's dream to have a beautiful flower to celebrate the festival, while a house-shaped lantern conveyed wishes to live in happiness.

"Every wing of this five-wing star represents each of us, given that they have our fingerprints on them," explained one child about his group's work. "It means that when we joined hands together, we can make a brilliant star."

Tran Thi Ngoc Anh, who is 10 years old and lives nearby, observed that the children with disabilities had "fun to the max".

"I approached a cute-looking girl and asked her name," she added. "But she just turned back and gesticulated with her hands."

"Even though she knows that I do not understand her language, she did try to reply," she said.

Nguyen Ngoc Ha, 15, who listens and speaks with difficulty and lives at Binh Thanh District's Hy Vong (Hope) School for hearing-impaired kids, said she tried to win the highest prize with her group's lantern, which was in the shape of a fish in the paddy field.

"We love to sing and dance," said Ha, who performed dances and songs to celebrate the moon and legendary figures who live on it.

"I love other hearing-impaired kids so much and try to make them express themselves like me," said Ha, noting that it was not until she was nine years of age that she began to speak after being sent to a special school.

In fact, disabled kids love to approach celebrity singers who come to entertain them. They crave handshakes and pose for photos with them.

The party, performances of lovely songs and dances, a fashion show and parade with lighted lanterns were activities that spiced up a fabulous evening for the kids.

Nguyen Thi Ngoc Anh, a teacher of Hy Vong School who accompanied some kids, said hearing-impaired children were hungry to mix and have fun with other children.

"They rarely set foot out of school, so they never want to miss a chance like this." — VNS

Related Articles