Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Short stories fill a long sentence

by Phung Nguyen

The write stuff: Prisoner Pham Ngoc Dinh writes a short-story collection with paper taken from used magazines in the prison. — File Photo

HAI PHONG — Few people believed that a notorious criminal from Hai Phong on death row in prison could write a short-story collection worthy of publishing.

But Pham Ngoc Dinh, 49, was able to do just that, and had a bounty of material, as his own life is as tragic as the characters in his collection.

After four-and-half years in prison, Dinh began writing his first-ever short-story collection Den va Trang (Black and White) with paper taken from used magazines in the prison.

Dinh painstakingly split the heavy, glossy pages from fashion magazines into two pages and used the white backs of the paper to write on. It took more than a month to prepare the paper, he said.

It was during the cold days in prison that he decided to write a book for the young generation on how to get rich through business. He thought that no such work had been written.

While he never felt fear when he was working as a gangster, he experienced nervousness when he took pen to paper.

"I was so anxious and shameful although there was only me in the room. I hadn't read or written for several years and in front of me was the gloomy fog. I didn't know how to complete the task," Dinh told Tien Phong newspaper.

He said he was obsessed about being able to finish the book, and thought of each day as his last, knowing that he would face execution.

Day after day, Dinh began writing from dawn to 10pm. Some days, he wrote 15 pages but on other days he completed only a couple of pages.

Every Friday he was allowed outside to sunbathe. Sometimes, when a good idea or a worthy word ignited in his mind, he ignored the rare minutes of freedom and admiration of the blue sky and rushed back to his cell.

The act of writing was a distraction that allowed him to forget about his execution day, he said. After completing the book in late 2005, he gave it to his wife to share with others.

Unlikely dream

Dinh said he had never wanted to write a book. But one spring day in 2004 changed his life.

He was listening to the then Prime Minister Phan Van Khai on the radio, who was urging writers to write about the country's march toward industrialisation and modern-isation.

"The Prime Minister encouraged me. I wanted to do something helpful for society. In this situation, the only thing I could do was write," Dinh recalled.

He said by the age of 40 he had not done anything helpful for anybody.

He then wrote a letter to his wife, asking her to find another husband. As he wrote, he was so nervous that he forgot many words and couldn't finish the letter.

Dinh said he hadn't read anything since leaving high school, so he looked for newspapers, magazines and books to read, although he hated to read.

The books brought him pleasure and introduced a picture of a life different from the world of drugs and crimes.

Dinh was born in a middle-class family in Hai Phong.

After two years at a sports college, he quit and joined a gang. He was arrested in 1990 and served a five-year sentence in prison. His first wife left him and moved to Germany.

After finishing his first prison term, he started a new life by selling cars and electronic appliances with some of his friends.

After making a lot of money, he married another woman. But tragedy returned when he bought and sold hard drugs as part of a drug ring and was arrested in 1999.

The court handed down a death sentence in 1999 and he began serving his term in 2000.

After being inspired by the Prime Minister, he began writing in mid-2004 and finished the 800-page short-story collection in 2005.

Two months after finishing the book, Dinh broke into tears when his death sentence was reduced to life in prison by the State President.

Since that time, he has been writing two books. He said he sometimes cries with happiness and pain when writing about his characters. Other prisoners have also broken down in tears when reading his works.

Recently, the President again reduced his sentence, this time to 20 years. Because he has already served 10 years, he will be released in 2020. — VNS

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Intel donates safety helmets to primary students

Intel Products Vietnam in coordination with AIP Foundation has donated 1,280 safety helmets to Nguyen Minh Quang Primary School.

The donation was part of a “Helmets for Kids” campaign and traffic safety curriculum handover ceremony for teachers and students of the school in HCMC’s District 9 last week.

Staff of Intel Products Vietnam also presented reflective jackets and participated in training the students about traffic safety and helmet use at the school’s newly constructed traffic safety corner, supported by the company.

“This is one of our many activities for the community,” said Rick Howarth, general director of Intel Products Vietnam. “I believe that educating students about safety awareness and creating helmet wearing habits at an early age will help reduce risks.”

The company’s staff also joined in games and interactive lessons designed for the students.

Mirjam Sidik, executive director of AIP Foundation, said the objective was to build Vietnamese children’s awareness of traffic safety in the hope that students and parents would have a positive influence on their communities by adhering to and encouraging others to follow traffic laws.

Nguyen Ngoc Tuong of the HCMC Traffic Safety Committee quoted the National Traffic Safety Committee’s statistics as saying that some 12,000 fatalities and 20,000 injuries were caused by traffic accidents each year.

“There are a lot of reasons for traffic accidents, but the main cause is because people have limited knowledge and awareness of traffic safety, especially parents and students. Most parents do not think about getting helmets for their children or encouraging them to wear helmets to prevent injuries,” Tuong said.

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Vietnam Young Lions announces winners

Two winning teams of the annual advertising competition, Vietnam Young Lions,  have been selected to represent Vietnam at the 2011 Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival, in France in June.

Twenty-six finalists took part in the contest on Thursday night as part of the Vietnam Advertising Festival 2010 in HCMC.

The winning teams of the respective print and Film/TV categories, Deadline and Yamasaki will be going to Cannes, while the runners-up in the two categories were The Contrast and H-T teams.

For the Media category, the first prize went to The Can Opener team and second to Eli-soi. The Can Opener will represent Vietnam at the Young Spikes 2011 leg of the Spikes Asia Advertising Festival which will be held in Singapore in September. All the winners that will join the international competitions next year will be fully sponsored to go abroad by Sun Flower Media Ltd., the country representative of Cannes Lions International Festival.

Young Lions Vietnam 2011 is the annual contest to discover and encourage young creative talents, who are studying or working in the advertising industry and media in Vietnam.

The teams participating in the Print category had 24 hours to complete their advertising projects on the computer, while the teams in TV/Film category had 48 hours to complete their entries with a dedicated camera and computer. The Media category’s teams had 24 hours to finish a media strategy within a predetermined budget, which they presented to the jury board last month.

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AmCham awards 60 scholarships

The American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (AmCham Vietnam) on Saturday granted 60 scholarships to top final-year students at HCMC-based universities.

Nearly 600 students from 10 universities, including University of Technology, University of Natural Sciences, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Economics and Law, University of Information Technology, International University, Hoa Sen University, Foreign Trade University, Banking University, and University of Law, applied for the scholarship.

After completing a four-round selection process, including application form screening, English language test, ability assessment, and interview in English, 60 applicants received the top awards. Of these, forty applicants received “AmCham Scholar” awards valued at US$500 each, plus US$380 training vouchers. In addition, 20 applicants received “Honorable Mentions” and US$300 training vouchers for their performance in the first three rounds of the AmCham Scholarship selection process. “The AmCham Scholarship is not only a monetary award, but also a challenge for the students to undergo a selection process similar to that used by most leading organizations,” Herb Cochran, executive director of AmCham Vietnam, said at the award ceremony.

To celebrate the 10th year of AmCham Scholarships, the HCMC People’s Committee awarded certificates of merit to AmCham Vietnam and the Executive Director of AmCham Vietnam, and Herb Cochran, for his contributions through the scholarship program to HCMC students.

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Monday, December 13, 2010

Phishers become active ahead of festive season

Over 3,000 people in Vietnam lost their email passwords between December 7 and 9 when they received an email titled “Christmas Present,” according to the Hanoi-based internet security firm BKAV.

The email said “Merry Christmas! A small Christmas present is sent to you” and asked victims to click on the link http://vn...day.com/chuc-mung-giang-sinh.php, which redirected them to a fake log-in website.

Here, they were asked to log in with their yahoo or gmail accounts to receive the gift.

It turned out to be a phishing attempt to steal passwords.

“Christmas and New Year are always opportunities for hackers to take advantage of, so everyone should be on alert and should not type their passwords into websites of unclear origins,” Nguyen Minh Duc, BKAV’s network security director, said.

Meanwhile, US security company Symantec has warned against an email titled “Get a Personalized Letter from Santa to Your Child!”.

It contains the Erkez.D@mm virus, it said.

Symantec warned users against updating antivirus software regularly or clicking on suspicious links in emails or IM messages. It recommended upgrading the computer’s central processing unit (CBU) and installing the latest anti-virus software.

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American War poet begins Viet Nam literary journey

HA NOI – American War veteran and poet Bruce Weigl is in Viet Nam for the launch of his poetical memoir After the Rain Stopped Pounding.

Weigl will participate in several discussions and literary exchanges during his visit which began last Friday.

Weigl, whose name is familiar in literature about the American War, has published several poetical anthologies, including The Monkey Wars and Song of Napalm which earned him a Pulitzer Prize-nomination in 1988.

Weigl was granted the Lannan Literary Award in Poetry in 2006.

In addition to writing poetry, Weigl worked with editor and translator Thanh T. Nguyen of the Joiner Research Centre to translate poems of liberation soldiers captured during war.

Weigl will recite his poems during the Friends poetry programme at the Quang Tri Old Citadel tonight.

The venue was among the fiercest battlefields of the American War and Vietnamese veterans who are members of varied poetry clubs will join the programme.

Weigl will also exchange views with Song Huong (Perfume River) Magazine which publishes creative writing, reviews and cultural research culture and literature central Hue Province.

He also will present his memoir The Circle of Hanh in Ha Noi on Wednesday. First published in the US in 2000 , the memoir is his own story about his struggles with drugs and alcohol after the war and his subsequent redemptive return to Viet Nam, where he adopted an eight-year-old girl, Hanh.

The launch of After the Rain Stopped Pounding, which has been translated into Vietnamese by Nguyen Phan Que Mai, will take place at the University of Culture, 418 La Thanh Road, Ha Noi at 7.30pm on Thursday.

Weigl will talk about trends in American poetry on the night. – VNS

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Artist bridges cross-cultural aesthetics

Expressive: Robert Mihagui and his works at the Homeland Colors: West&East exhibition now in HCM City. — Photo Sunny Rose

Expressive: Robert Mihagui and his works at the Homeland Colors: West&East exhibition now in HCM City. — Photo Sunny Rose

HCM CITY — Thirty contemporary oil paintings by French-Vietnamese artist Robert Mihagui are on display at an exhibition in HCM City.

Jacques Blanchard, an architect and Mihagui's friend, says there are few differences between the man and his art: "We find the same dominating characteristics, the spontaneity, and the instinctive gesture."

But, depending on their own perspective, beholders can read different things from a single work. Thus, a painting could portray the tranquil landscapes of Touraine in France, which are dear to his heart, or the stark beauty of northern Viet Nam where he spent his early childhood.

The riot of colours provoke a patchwork of feelings, from dazzling joy to a Vietnamese melancholy, giving his works a strength and charm of which it is not easy to grow tired.

Mihagui was born in 1945 in Vinh Phu Province during French colonial time. He studied fine arts from 1961 to 1964 in Surgeres, France, after moving to that country in 1958 with his father.

He spent much time travelling in the painting circles of Montmartre to the detriment of his studies after deciding at a fairly young age that his passion was painting and his calling was in the arts.

He was interested in pictorial techniques and pigments.

At 25, he hit upon a personal style which is somewhere between abstraction and post-impressionism though his works were impressionist in the beginning.

He narrates an interesting story for his move towards abstraction.

"I was disappointed with a work I had just finished. I wiped it off by petrol and went to sleep. The first guest who came to my studio the next day insisted on buying that picture which had now become quite so interesting."

He now views his style as a reconciliation of Vietnamese and European aesthetics, with the language of modern Western abstraction being enriched by a Vietnamese sensibility rooted in the past.

In 1975 he spent six months restoring the dome of Saint Augustin's Church in Paris, France, believing there could be no better inspiration than that born from manual work in such a spiritual place.

He currently lives in Viet Nam, refreshing his memories of its spectacular landscapes.

The exhibition, titled Homeland Colors: West&East, will be on until Saturday at Phuong Mai, 129B, Le Thanh Ton Street, District in HCM City.

The works on display can also be seen at http//www.vietnam-art.com.vn.

The paintings are priced at US$1,000-$3,000. — VNS

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