Showing posts with label ldquo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ldquo. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2011

When year’s 1st visitor portents things to come

Among the many taboos and rituals connected with the Lunar New Year in Vietnam is xong dat, or “first-footing” as the Scots call it.

It is a deep-rooted belief that the first person to enter the house in a year will have a bearing on the family’s fortune through the year. Thus, the rich and popular are invited to come home at that time.

Traditionally, the first visitor hands out “lucky” money and New Year gifts to the hosts and seldom stays longer than a few minutes. This is to ensure that things do not get “stuck” in the new year.

But like many other traditions, xong dat too has evolved into a personal belief without a strict interpretation. It is altered to suit each family and varies according to region.

What has remained unchanged is the fact that a person who can bring luck should be the first-footer.

The flip side is that Vietnamese are chary of visiting anyone’s house early on New Year’s Day for fear they may be held responsible for any possible misfortune.

“I still remember the year when my husband suffered from a serious illness and passed away,” an elderly woman in Tan Binh District, Ho Chi Minh City, said.

“An unwanted guest visited us early morning on the first day and I cannot help recalling that experience.”

Who will bring luck?

There are several important qualities a family will look for to find their first-footer: The person’s Chinese Zodiac sign is the most common, especially in the northern and central parts.

In Chinese astrology, each year -- and a person born in that year -- is represented by an animal in a cycle of 12 signs. The hosts ask a fortuneteller to identify the animal that is luckiest for a particular year and themselves.

“I [ask] for a sign compatible with my husband’s because he is our family’s breadwinner,” Le Anh Dao, a public official in Tan Binh District, said.

“This is the Year of the Cat and my husband’s sign is the rat. So he said I should look around for someone with a Rat sign.

“It is important because the compatibility of Zodiac signs under which we are born and derive our fate from determines everything important in our life -- family, career, health, and luck.”

But in other families, sign compatibility is not a big deal.

“I don’t look at the person’s sign. As long as the person is good, healthy, and cheerful, I am fine,” the elderly women in Tan Binh district said.

“I would even prefer a family member who I can trust and know well rather than some distant relative even if he or she has the right Zodiac sign. I want to make sure of my family’s luck.”

First-footers also need to have a bright and cheerful disposition, good health, career success, and a happy family, things people normally aspire for in the new year.

Personal beliefs and experiences have already altered xong dat and it is now the turn of modernization and consumerism in urban areas, with agencies like Hoa Da in Hanoi offering xong dat services.

For VND600,000 (US$31), Hoa Da will dispatch an embodiment of luck to your house for 30 minutes. Young men born under various Zodiac signs and with good looks and a lively and cheerful countenance are hired by such agencies to call on families who do not mind paying to get the right first-footers.

Customers are also provided consultation on signs and identification cards of first-footers as proof.

Customers are usually companies or individuals running businesses who seem especially sentimental about a good beginning.

In Scottish folklore, first-footing is the practice of visiting the house of a friend or neighbor soon after midnight on New Year’s Eve with gifts.

The first-foot is traditionally a tall, dark-haired male. In some places, females and fair-haired males are regarded unlucky.

He usually brings a coin, bread, salt, coal, or a drink (usually whisky), which respectively represent prosperity, food, flavor, warmth, and good cheer.

In Greece, it is believed that the first person to enter the house on New Year's Day brings good or bad luck. Many families follow this tradition to this day and carefully select the first-foot.

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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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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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Sunday, January 16, 2011

Vietnam singers steal ideas from foreign stars?

Building a personal image has been considered as a good way to promote Vietnamese artists but as more local singers have been caught copying styles from international celebrities, the situation is really alarming.  

After causing scandals with her first novel “Chain” about the sex life of a newly-wedded couple, singer and actress Le Kieu Nhu has recently been criticized for her album titled “Lac Tien” (Paradise), which is eerily the same as a poster from a well-known Chinese model’s online game.

Nhu admitted that the album, shot by photographer Coban, is her very idea and told the media the resemblance is only accidental.

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Le Kieu Nhu

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A famous Chinese model

Meanwhile, more and more local teen stars have rushed to copycat foreign celebrities’ styles and posture in posing for promotion photos.

Singers Truong Quynh Anh and Baggio copied Korean movie stars Bi Rain and Song Hye Kyo in their poster from the famous Korean TV series “Full House”.

Other singers Cong Khanh, Nam Cuong, Tim, Uyen Thao and Wanbi tried to look exactly the same like the five characters from Korean TV series “Boys over Flower”.

Too unnerving, too accidental!

A photo featuring teen stars Dong Nhi and Khong Tu Quynh is thought to copy the idea from a Disney Channel’s movie Princess Protection Program.

Dong Nhi is the splitting image of Selena Gomez. Wow.

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A semi-nude photo of star footballer Cong Vinh and his girlfriend Thuy Tien - a celebrated singer - is criticized as imitating Calvin Klein underwear ad.

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Friday, January 14, 2011

HCMC to host book road fest during Tet

Ho Chi Minh City will organize the first-ever Book Road Festival to celebrate the New Year of the Cat from January 31 to February 3, according to the city’s Department of Information and Communications.

Visitors could view a wide range of books on display along the Mac Thi Buoi Street, near the Nguyen Hue flower road in district 1.

Exhibitions featuring new and bestselling books, calligraphy demonstration, and Q&A session with the authors will be organized.

The organizers including local publishing houses, book distribution companies and private bookstores will also showcase a special display area dedicated to children books.

Festival-goers will have a chance to witness antique, valuable and rare books like “Technique du peuple Annamite, “Hoang Trieu Ngoc Diep”, “Hoang Tu Pho”, “Hoang nu pho”, “Hoang Trieu Ton Pho tien bien”, and “Gia Dinh bao”.

The fest is expected to encourage a reading culture and promote the city’s tourism to local and international visitors.

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Monday, December 27, 2010

A rural taste for international tourists

The “Farmer – fisherman” tour offering tourists a chance to catch fish and collect rubbish like real farmers on the Thu Bon River in Hoi An ancient town has attracted many international tourists.

The tour is not to discover and sightsee the landscape, but is aimed at turning tourists into true fishermen who would live in the countryside and collect rubbish on Thu Bon River, Bay Mau Coconut Village, and the Hoi An’s Cua Dai sea.

Finland President Tarja Halonen selected this tour several years ago.

She also tried to practice rowing coracle and to be a fisherwoman during a week in Vietnam. Before returning to her country, she thanked the tour operator for offering her a meaningful and interesting holiday.

She said she was happy to be a fisherwoman, and to enjoy the life of the rural people and shared happiness with gentle and optimistic fishermen.

“Especially, I can taste the local traditional culture. Those are my unforgettable moments in Vietnam.”

The tour founder Tran Van Khoa hailing from Hoi An said that he formed this tour because 80 pct of the Vietnamese population earns a living from agriculture like fish catching and breeding.

“Vietnam has exported millions of tons of rice and seafood each year”.

This green tour not only helps promote Vietnamese culture to the world, but also contributes to protecting the environment.

On average, 4,000 international tourists book the tour every year, said Khoa.

Here are some photos of the tour “Farmer – Fisherman”

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Intl tour

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Intl tour

Intl tour

Intl tour

Intl tour

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