Showing posts with label ethnic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethnic. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

Ethnology museum celebrates Tet with diverse programme

Ethnology museum celebrates Tet with diverse programme

The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology will hold its annual Tet (Lunar New
Year) celebrations on February 6-8, with music, food and games – and the
participation of 90 representatives from six ethnic groups from around
the country.


The Raglai from the central province of
Ninh Thuan and the Dao Lo Gang and Na Mieo from the northern province
of Lang Son will be participating in the holiday programme for the
first time.


Traditional performances will include gong
ceremonies of the Raglai, prayers for peace and good crops by the Na
Mieo, Tay and Dao Lo Gang, the lion dance of the Nung, and the bamboo
pole dance of the Thai, as well as calligraphy, water puppetry of the
Kinh majority.


Kids will be able to join in a variety of
folk games, including swinging, wrestling, walking on stilts, chess
playing and stick pushing. They also be able to make their own folk toys
under the instruction of ethnic people, including making figurines and
pinwheels.


This year, visitors will be able to enjoy
traditional food from the Tay ethnic group, such as roast pig with mac
mat (a type of wild leaf), steamed glutinous rice, dried buffalo meat
and traditional cakes.


About 150 student volunteers will join museum staff in helping visitors enjoy the events.


The events would help preserve and popularise the precious cultural
traditions of Vietnam , said museum director Vo Quang Trong.


Visitors would gain a better understanding of the cultures of the
different ethnic groups, as well as join in the spirit of the
festivities, Trong said./.

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Monday, December 20, 2010

Campaign to preserve folk festivals

Vietnam should carry out a long-term campaign to conserve and develop
folk festivals because people from industrialised countries are
fascinated by culture of agricultural societies, experts say.


The Tin tuc (News) newspaper cited the experts as saying that the
campaign should heighten public awareness of the need to preserving the
nation's folk culture and at the same time, intensify to research into
rituals and festivals with a view to restoring them authentically.


Concerned agencies should create favourable conditions for the
festivals to thrive by supporting ethnic minorities develop economically
and improve their living standards.


They stressed
the need for macro-level policies to manage and organise these festivals
regularly, preserve the national character, and promote the traditional
skills and talents of residents, in making various handicraft items for
instance.


Folk festivals are "live museums" of
cultural and historical value and they play a big part in attracting
visitors to the country, the paper said.


In 2000 –
when the national programme of action on tourism was launched – the
sector chose to develop products associated with 15 major festivals
typical to various regions and ethnic minorities.


These included the Long Tong Festival celebrated by the Tay people­the
earliest known ethnic group in Vietnam , the Kate Festival of the
Cham people and the Ooc Om Bok Festival of the Khmer people.


While the programme aimed to respect and conserve the nation's
tradition while meeting the demand of tourists, there have been several
inadequacies in implementation, said Hoang Thi Diep, deputy director
general of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.


She said the organising of folk festivals of ethnic minorities in
several instances left a lot to be desired because they were
"supplemented with modern and miscellaneous cultural aspects" that
robbed the events of their authenticity, disappointing visitors.


Some festivals were overly commercialised and some even took advantage of superstitions, Diep said.


Le Thi Minh Ly, deputy director of the Cultural Heritage Department
under the Ministry of Culture and Information, said it was necessary to
spread accurate information via mass media about the festivals so
visitors can also respect and not destroy the festive environment.


"Authorities in localities should also make residents aware of the
risk of commercialising their traditional festivals, as also not misuse
them for gambling and other negative activities," Ly said.


It is estimated that 7,966 festivals are held every year nationwide, 88 per cent of which are folk festivals.


Festivals of ethnic minorities are usually linked to their daily lives
and a valuable social and cultural resource that need to be preserved
well, experts said./.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Dak Lak hangs on to vanishing heritage

Dak Lak hangs on to vanishing heritage

The Central Highlands province of Dak Lak is being stripped of its
cultural heritage as gongs, drums and many ancient hunting knives and
tools are used to feed the thriving trade in ethnic antiques, officials
warn.


Buon Trap town in Krong Ana district boasts an all-woman team playing
the Jo, a gong designed exclusively for women of the E De ethnic group.


"The team play on two ten-gong sets which are owned by a local family.
Six gongs were sold to antique collectors in recent years and two others
were broken," said Tran Viet Du, an official with the district's
Culture Office said.


"When the team play the Jo, we have to rent gongs from a nearby town for the performers," Du said.


"Buon Trap is one of many locations in the province where gongs have
been sold to traders that can never be replaced again," said Y Wai Bya,
director of Dac Lac's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.


"That is due largely to the poverty of the local people. Many people do
not hesitate to sell antique gongs to collectors to get large sums of
money," he said.


Du and Bya are among many officials who have expressed growing alarm about the antique trade in Central Highlands provinces.


"Researchers specialising in the Central Highlands' culture and history
need to come up with long-term strategies for the preservation of
gongs, drums and other old items relating to ethnic culture," Bya said.


Bya admitted that the province still lacked policies to
preserve gongs and train officials to gain a profound understanding of
traditional music and the culture of ethnic people.


Bya said the provincial People's Committee recently approved a policy to assist gong owners.


"Each family that owns an antique gong will receive an annual stipend
of 500,000 VND (25 USD) from the province," he said, giving no
further details.


The committee is also working on a
project to build in each village a museum to display traditional musical
instruments and items used in the daily lives of the ethnic people.


"More festivals will be organised in Dak Lak's villages and districts
where ethnic people can perform gongs, drums and introduce their folk
music to outside audiences," Bya said.


The centuries-old
gong music is a precious cultural heritage of Vietnam's ethnic people.
They play the gong to commemorate a good harvest, during festivals, and
to mark occasions like the birth of children, weddings, and funerals.


The Central Highlands gong culture was recognised as a Masterpiece of
Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2006.


Cultural researcher Y Duong, grandson of Y Jut Nie K'Dam, author of the
first Vietnamese – E De Dictionary, said he had spent many years working
on a project to protect gongs and would submit it soon to the Dak Lak
People's Committee for consideration.


Apart from ancient
gongs and drums, K'pan long benches used by gong performers and tools
used by hunters of elephants and wild animals are much sought after by
antique traders.


Ama Pet, a well-known elephant hunter in
Buon Don town, said he was among few people who still kept the leather
ropes used in elephant hunting.


Pet caught and
domesticated 15 elephants using his rope which is more than 10m in
length. Elephant hunting is now banned in Dak Lak. He said he intends to
sell his rope to have money to spend for the family.


He
said he has priced the rope at 15 million VND (750 USD) including a
piece of buffalo leather used to cover the back of the elephant./.

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Seminar spotlights ethnic cultural preservation

Preserving unique architectural features and authentic traditional
customs of ethnic minority groups is an effective and necessary move for
conserving and promoting Vietnamese cultural identities.


This
view was shared by cultural researchers and managers at a seminar in
Hanoi on Nov. 24, reviewing the implementation of the national target
programme on preserving traditional villages of ethnic minority groups
over the past ten years.


The programme has been carried out in 20
villages of the ethnic minority groups of S’Tieng, Cham, Bana, K’Ho,
M’nong, Ede, Van Kieu, Kho Mu, Muong, Thai, H’Mong, Lo Lo, Tay, Dzao,
and Khmer, in 20 provinces nationwide.

It has assisted ethnic
minority people in the target localities to protect traditional
architectural features of their communal meeting halls and their homes,
as well as preserving intangible cultural values, including their own
festivals, folk songs and dances, traditional costumes and handicrafts.


Authentic
customs and practices the target ethnic minority groups have tried to
preserve have been collected, performed and introduced to the public
through cultural exchange activities held in the framework of the
programme.


In addition, the programme has facilitated the
effective implementation of the Party and State’s ethnic policies,
especially policies pertaining to poverty reduction, education,
healthcare, family planning and childcare.


Economically, the
ethnic minority beneficiaries have learnt to make profits from their own
cultural and tourism products, farm produce and traditional handicraft
items, to further improve their material life.


The seminar
participants agreed that the preservation of ethnic minority villages
has greatly contributed to raising the awareness of branches, sectors
and even ethnic people on the position and significance of conserving
and promoting the unique values of ethnic cultures.


The work has
also helped create new cultural values, with culture becoming a
spiritual goal and a driving force of ethnic minority people in the
course of boosting their social development.


The preservation of
ethnic minority villages has provided a new model, along with
experiences for the State management agencies to better their
organisation of preservation and promotion of traditional cultures at
the grassroots level to help ethnic minority-inhabited areas develop in a
sustainable manner, seminar participants agreed./.

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