Showing posts with label Vietnamese Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vietnamese Culture. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

An elegant symbol of Vietnamese culture

An elegant symbol of Vietnamese culture

The image of the Ao dai (Vietnam’s traditional long dress) is often
associated with images of the country and is a beautiful symbol of
Vietnamese culture.


Bich Hue Boivineau, wife of the
French Consul General in Ho Chi Minh City, shared her feelings on
Vietnam’s traditional long dress, on the eve of the first ever
“non-border Ao dai festival” scheduled to be held in Ho Chi Minh City on
January 21.


She said that she and her husband and
two children agreed to take part in the festival because it is a
charitable cultural event that aims to raise funds for 70 poor
households in Phong Dien district in the central province of Thua
Thien-Hue. The funds will also be used to buy a boat for pupils in Quang
Trach district in the central province of Quang Binh to go to school.


“One interesting thing when we wear the Ao dai is
that it highlights the strong points and hides the weak points of our
body,” she said, adding that women in Ao dai look graceful, shapely and
elegant.


She said she owned a big collection of Vietnam’s traditional long dresses and wears them on both festive and normal days.


When presenting the Ao dai to international friends, we will take a
variety of dresses to portray the non-borders characteristic of the
Vietnamese traditional dress, Bich Hue Boivineau noted.


The festival, organised by the Vietnam Long Dress Association, will
draw the participation of representatives from the consulate generals of
ten countries, including the US, France, Russia, Germany, Cuba, Japan,
the Republic of Korea, India, Indonesia and Laos as well as five foreign
organisations and businesses operating in Vietnam./.

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Friday, October 8, 2010

Vietnamese culture delights German audiences

A colourful programme introducing Vietnamese culture was held on October
3 during a multi-cultural week in Leipzig, Germany.


The city’s Vietnamese community brought colourful folk dances and
songs to the festival, with the women wearing Vietnam’s traditional
long dress, the ao dai. The performance, which was opened by the mayor
of Leipzig, Andreas Muller, received a warm response from the
audience.


Pham Van Toan, First Secretary of the
Vietnamese Embassy in Germany, underlined the significance of the
event, which took place as both countries celebrate the 35th
anniversary of diplomatic ties.


He said it has helped
to portray Vietnam’s culture and its people to the German people,
preserve and promote the national cultural identity of the Vietnamese
community in Germany and strengthen solidarity and understanding
between Vietnamese and foreigners.


Earlier, the
Vietnamese community in Leipzig had worked with the local
authorities to put an exhibition of photos taken by Vietnamese and
German photographers, from September 20-Oct. 2./.

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Monday, August 30, 2010

Vietnamese Culture Festival held in Berlin

The Vietnamese Culture Festival has been held in Berlin, Germany,
to mark the 35th anniversary of the establishment of the
Vietnam-Germany diplomatic ties.


The two-day
festival that wrapped up on August 29 included a photo exhibition on
Vietnamese land, people and culture, traditional martial arts, folk song
and dance performance.


The festival also featured a
display of Vietnam’s handicraft products as well as the nation’s
culture, tourism and cuisine.


Addressing the opening
ceremony on August 28, Deputy Foreign Minister Nguyen Thanh Son, who is
also Chairman of the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese, spoke
highly of the initiative to host the festival in Germany, saying
that it is a good opportunity to enhance the exchange between the two
peoples.


Berlin Deputy Mayor Harald Wolf said that
the relationship between Germany and Vietnam has become closer
over the past 35 years through the exchange of experiences, culture and
high ranking delegations as well as political and economic activities.


There are around 20,000 Vietnamese people in Berlin,
said Wolf, adding that the Vietnamese community in Berlin now has a
stable position in the society, contributing to diversifying Berlin’s cultural life./.

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