Showing posts with label bac ninh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bac ninh. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The Museum of Ethnology holds joyful activities to celebrate Tet




The Museum of Ethnology holds joyful activities to celebrate Tet





(VOVworld) – The Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi has cooperated with Lao Cai province to hold ethnic folklore music shows and games during the traditional lunar new year festival.

People play tug-of-war at the Museum of Ethnology in a spring festival
People play tug-of-war at the Museum of Ethnology in a spring festival
The festival will introduce cultural characteristics of the Mong, Dao, Nung, and Bo Y in Lao Cai province and their festivals like Gau Tao, pan-pipe dance by a “Thang Co” hotpot, and ritual and wedding dances of the Dao. Visitors to the Museum can play various folk games of the Tho, Si La, San Chay, Dao, and Mong.

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Prestigious teachers write calligraphy words of good luck for people
Prestigious teachers write calligraphy words of good luck for people
Artisans from northern provinces of Bac Ninh, Hai Duong, and Hai Phong will perform puppetry, make To He, print Dong Ho paintings, write calligraphy, and produce earthen firecrackers.

During the 4th and the 5th day of the lunar new year, visitors will experience unique games by ethnic people in Lao Cai and other traditional activities in the north and a firework display















The Museum of Ethnology holds joyful activities to celebrate Tet — Talk Vietnam

Friday, September 16, 2011

Simply Awful


Awful pig-chopping ritual protested

September 16, 2011  about Uncategorized



LookAtVietnam - Many people have shown their fearfulness, compassion and dudgeon over a video clipof a pig-chopping ritual at a traditional festival in Hanoi’s neighboring province of Bac Ninh.
The video clip was uploaded to YouTube several days ago. The clip filmed a live pig which was forced to lie on its back, four legs were roped and spread to four sides. The pig was carried to the yard of a communal house, surrounded by a frenetic crowd.
After performing some rituals, a man held a long knife and cut the pig in two parts after three stabs. Blood streamed out, dying the yard in red in the shouting of the crowd, including many children.
This clip is said to film a pig offering rite at a traditional pig chopping festival in Nem Thuong hamlet, Khac Niem commune, Tien Du district in Bac Ninh province. This festival is held to commemorate a general in the Ly Dynasty, who reclaimed this land. According to legend, the general brought his troops ton this land and slaughtered wild boars to feed his soldiers. The pig-chopping festival originated from this. Pig blood in thefestival is believed to symbolize prosperity, reproductive ability, vitality and good harvest.
The video clip was removed from YouTube for violating the page’s rules. However, it has been copied by some websites and made the online community angry. A group named “Calling for ban on the pig chopping festival in Tien Du – Bac Ninh” was set up on Facebook and has attracted hundreds of members.
Many people could not believe that such an awful festival still exists in Vietnam. They called for reconsidering the humanity of this festival, though it is a traditional event.
“No, no, culture is good traditions. Such cruel tradition is not culture,” one wrote on an online forum. This opinion is agreed by other members.
Many people also worried about the bad impacts from this festival on kids.
PV

Thursday, October 29, 2009

PM attends opening ceremony of Samsung mobile phone factory - PM attends opening ceremony of Samsung mobile phone factory

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has attended the opening of a Samsung mobile phone factory in Yen Phong industrial park in the northern province of Bac Ninh.

At the opening ceremony on October 28, the PM praised the Samsung electronics company and the province of Bac Ninh for working together to put a mobile phone factory into operation. He expressed his belief that the factory will contribute to the socioeconomic development of Bac Ninh in particular and the country in general.

Mr. Dung said the government will create good conditions for the company in their business operations in Vietnam. He also asked the company to increase the proportion of local content in their products as they had previously committed.

The mobile factory in Yen Phong is one of Samsung’s seven most modern factories in the world with a capacity to produce 1.5 million products per month. There are now 2.500 employees working at the factory.

It plans to raise its monthly capacity to six million products by 2010 and to nine million by 2011, creating 8,000 – 12,000 jobs for local people.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Sacred places

The most sacred sites in any Vietnamese town are the pagoda, temple and communal house. Tuan Anh checks out all three in Bac Ninh province.

The 1B national highway, which connects Hanoi with the far northeastern province of Lang Son, makes for a short trip to Bac Ninh province. After a swift drive of 20km, you can find yourself in Dinh Bang village standing outside Den Do (Do Temple), which was built nearly one thousand years ago by the Vietnamese King Ly Thai Tong.

This was his hometown and the temple, which was constructed in 1030AD, was later used to worship the eight kings of the Ly Dynasty, hence it also bares the name Den Ly Bat De (The Temple of the Eight Ly Kings). The Ly dynasty was devoutly Buddhist and the temple is concealed in a highly traditional and tranquil landscape, which seems to have avoided invasive modernisation.

The temple grounds covers an area of 31,250sqm and includes a scenic half-moon shaped lake, which seems to offer instant relief by reconnecting visitors to nature. Through the Five-Dragon Gate, I enter the main shrine. Outside, I spot Ly Thai To’s (formerly Ly Cong Uan) Edict on the Transfer of the Capital from Hoa Lu to Dai La (now Hanoi), issued in 1010AD after he founded the Ly Dynasty.

The main shrine houses statues of the eight kings and overlooks a beautiful pavilion in the middle of the lake. It’s the perfect spot for a 15-minute break especially as you can feel a cool breeze even on a hot summer’s day. “This pavilion is where villagers often hold traditional quan ho (love duets) performances or where the audience stands to watch a water puppet shows in the lake,” says Hoang Van Bach, a local resident.

After leaving the temple, I head to the village’s communal house, which also bares the name of Dinh Bang. This is one of the oldest and finest communal houses in Vietnam. Constructed from 1700AD to 1736AD, its structure includes a three-gate door, two left and right wings and a ceremonial hall, which is linked to the back sanctuary hall making the shape of a Chinese character meaning “communal”.

Dinh Bang communal house is constructed using large pillars made from teak. Its floor is elevated to 0.7 metres above the ground, making it highly durable and resistant to humidity and floods. The house is used for worshipping the Mountain God, the Water God and the Farm God, as well as the six individuals who led the reestablishment of Dinh Bang Village in the 15th century after it was razed by Chinese invaders.

It also functions as the village’s meeting hall and is home to the village’s government office. As I wander around two women spread rice seeds across the communal house’s spacious courtyard to dry them under the bright sun, making a striking golden carpet that somehow compliments and completes the idyllic rural scene.

“The communal house and its courtyard are the heart and soul of a typical Vietnamese village, serving as the venue for most of our community activities, so we all love our communal house,” says Nguyen Thi Vai, one of the women drying rice in the yard. “On a quiet and sunny day, the courtyard makes a good, clean drying site for rice seeds.

We have been doing this for centuries and it does not harm anyone, even though they recently put up a sign on this courtyard to prohibit it.” My last stop is Phat Tich Pagoda in Phat Tich Commune, Tien Du District, not far away from Ding Bang village in Tu Son Town. There is not much to see at the moment as the main structure, built in 1057AD, and has been destroyed and restored over the centuries and is currently under restoration again.

A giant jade Buddha statue has set off for Australia after making a stop at this pagoda as part of a world tour. The showcase attracted thousands of visitors and caused a bit of mess around the site. But the special thing about Phat Tich Pagoda is the history. This area was where Indian Buddhism first made arrived in Vietnam back in the first century AD and created a foundation for Buddhism to flourish in Vietnam.

After the pagoda was officially built in the 11th century, it became a major Buddhism centre for the Ly Dynasty. The scenery is also breathtaking as the pagoda sits on the side of the imposing Phat Tich mountain. Getting through the lush front garden and the pagoda’s various structures, I start to climb the stone stair up the mountain into a forest of pine and sandalwood trees.

The silent walk into nature takes me closer to a feeling of absolute peace and tranquillity – the key to getting in touch with Buddhism.

VietNamNet/Time-out