Showing posts with label rsquo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rsquo. Show all posts

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Yen Tu Buddhist spring festival kicks off

Deputy PM Nguyen Thien Nhan beat the drum, opening the Yen Tu Pagoda Spring Festival in northern Quang Ninh Province Saturday, the tenth day of the first lunar month.

Prominent at the ceremony were Vice State President Nguyen Thi Doan and the Vice Chairman of the Vietnam Buddhist Sangha’s Executive Council, Most Venerable Thich Thanh Tu.

Buddhist dignitaries, monks, nuns, followers and visitors joined in offering incense to King Tran Nhan Tong, who reigned over the country from 1279 to 1293 and then left the throne to devote his life to Buddhism.

They also joined another ceremony to pray for peace to the country and people.

Yen Tu has so far welcomed over 20,000 visitors since the first day of the lunar year and the festival will last three months during spring. The site received over 2.1 million visitors in 2010.

Yen Tu mountain is located about 50km from Ha Long City. The route of the pilgrimage, which winds from the foot of the mountain to its highest peak, is almost 30km. Dong Pagoda, which sits atop the mountain’s highest peak, is more than a kilometre above sea level.

The area’s beautiful natural landscape and awe-inspiring scenery, along with surrounding ancient pagodas and hermitages, are said to have been the reason that King Tran Nhan Tong passed the throne to his son so that he could devote his life living as a Buddhist monk at Yen Tu mountain. Whilst there, he founded the Truc Lam meditation sect, which has led to Yen Tu being recognised as the country’s leading centre for Buddhism.

 

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Hai Phong cancels Valentine’s kissing contest

The romantic kissing contest for 100 couples supposed take place in northern city of Hai Phong Sunday to celebrate Valentine’s Day has been canceled.

Le Tat Vinh of Provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism said the agency decided not to authorize the kissing contest set to take place at Hai Phong’s Viet-Czech Cultural Center at 14 pm February 13.

Director of the center, Trinh Phuc Tue said a contract to lease the venue for the event was also canceled.

Operated under the motto “there is no everlasting love, just everlasting moments of love”, the contest, named “The party of kisses”, is meant to create a unique opportunity for the city’s youth to demonstrate the depth and length of their love for their significant others.

100 couples, all over 18 years old, had signed up for the knockout competition.

According to the contest’s rules, couples would have to compete in an assigned compulsory position which allowed only one of the two to stand while kissing.

20 would be selected from the audience to serve as judges evaluating couples’ performance.

The couple exchanging the most impressive kiss in the longest time would be awarded a special prize, a VND 15million (US$ 769) laptop.

The event, if authorized, would be hosted by joint-stock media company Golden Brand in collaboration with Doublemint Vietnam and PNJ Jewelry Company.

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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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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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Monday, December 27, 2010

I am your dad, not the monkey: Chinese actor

Chinese actor Liu Xiao Ling Tong, famous for starring as Sun Wukong or Monkey King in a popular 1980s Chinese TV series, raises numerous monkeys to the point his daughter thought one monkey was her father.

The 51-year-old internationally-acclaimed star in the epic ‘Journey to the West’ gave an exclusive interview Saturday with Tuoi Tre during his five-day tour in Vietnam starting December 25.

Can you communicate with monkeys in real life?

The number of monkeys I keep in my house are even more numerous than my family’s offspring.

But it’s not always an advantage if you keep close contact with the monkey. My daughter grows up thinking that she is a daughter of the monkey.

Even my wife sometimes becomes shocked at seeing our house like a hideout for monkeys. Also she is sometimes panicked seeing me in anger with my eyes opening wide [in imitation of the Monkey King].

I know a photographer who won an international award with a photo he took of me and a monkey. At the time, I was costumed as Sun Wukong and the real monkey looked like it was trying to shake my hand.

It’s in the animal’s instinct to raise its hand upon seeing me. The picture undergoes no modifications like Photoshop or whatsoever.

The monkey shares similar feelings with humans being, has happiness, anger, love and hatred. It may become sulky if you tease it with fruits but then take them back.

If you treat a monkey well, it will return the favor to you.

You announced that you will not teach anyone how to act the Monkey King the way you did

 TNK 2

A minor crisis has taken place with the role of Sun Wukong in China. Those who act differently from me will not be accepted by the audience. But doing it similarly to me is called mimicking.

Many learners who train themselves to become actor of the Monkey King admitted that the more they tried to mimic, the more impossible the task would be.

So I don’t want to teach anyone because I want to let them study themselves from what I did and develop it into their own, not to mimic it.

Besides, I now find it interesting with the other job: writing and taking care of the Hall of Fame of Wu Cheng’en [who is credited with authoring the novel] and an exhibition hall for me [in the eastern province of Jiangsu].

What do you think about new variations of Sun Wukong, the main character of the novel?

In some films adapted from the novel, they let Sun Wukong having sex with monsters, or marrying an adopted daughter of the Bodhisattva of Mercy.

I always give the advice when I come to Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan and others that ‘you should develop it not to distort it’.

One of the main characteristics of Sun Wukong is honesty.

I know children in Vietnam enjoy watching Sun Wukong on television every summer and I want to tell them that Sun Wukong always keeps his eyes over children’s development.

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