Showing posts with label intangible cultural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label intangible cultural. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Plan to preserve UNESCO heritage launched in Hanoi

Plan to preserve UNESCO heritage launched in Hanoi

The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism on Jan. 22 launched a
national action plan to preserve and develop the value of the Giong
festival, which has been recognised as an Intangible Cultural Heritage
of Humanity by the UNESCO.


The plan was announced at a ceremony held in Phu Dong commune, Gia Lam
district of Hanoi to receive the certificate of recognition of the
UNESCO title.


At the ceremony, UNESCO Chief Representative in
Hanoi Katherine Muller-Marin stressed that the Giong festival has been
deeply impressed in the life of residents in the Red river delta as a
part of their characteristics, passing from generations to generations.
The recognition of the festival as an intangible cultural heritage of
humanity is expected to accelerate humans’ creativeness and dialogues
between cultures.


The ceremony was held in an open air of a
northern countryside with an incense offering to Saint Giong at the
beginning and then, the performances of ceremonies of the festival.


UNESCO
officially honoured Vietnam’s Giong festival as an Intangible Cultural
Heritage of Humanity at a meeting of its Inter-Governmental Committee in
Nairobi, Kenya, on November 16, 2010.


The festival was Hanoi’s third heritage honour presented by the UNESCO in 2010.


The other sites include 82 steles engraved with names of doctorate
holders for centuries in the Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam, Vietnam’s first
university, which have been recognised as Documentary Heritage of the
Memory of the World programme. The central site of the Thang Long Royal
Citadel has won the title “World Cultural Heritage”.


The
Giong festival is held annually in several parts of northern Vietnam,
most typically in the Phu Dong and Soc Temples in Hanoi, to commemorate
Saint Giong, one of the immortal quartets in the Vietnamese legends.


Legend has it that under the sixth King Hung’s reign (around 500 BC)
Vietnam was threatened by the Kingdom of Yin, to the north of Vietnam.


A little boy, who was unable to crawl, roll over and say a single word
at the age of three, had surprisingly grown up to a giant man in just
several days after getting news on the foreign invasion. He used local
bushes of bamboo to defeat aggressors and flew into the sky with his
iron horse after the final victory.


In order to show their gratitude to the hero of Giong village, people proclaimed him Saint Giong.


The festival meets all qualifications for an intangible cultural
heritage of humanity as it has been conserved by the community as part
of the national cultural identity, handed down from generations to
generations, holds creativeness of humanity and represents aspiration
for prosperity by every family and peace for the nation and the world./.

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Giong festival wins UNESCO’s heritage title

Giong festival wins UNESCO’s heritage title

UNESCO officially honoured Vietnam’s Giong festival as an Intangible
Cultural Heritage of Humanity at a meeting of its Inter-Governmental
Committee in Nairobi, Kenya, on November 16.


The Hanoi People’s
Committee reported that it is Hanoi’s third heritage honour presented by
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation
(UNESCO) in 2010.


The other sites include 82 steles engraved
with names of doctorate holders for centuries in the Van Mieu-Quoc Tu
Giam, Vietnam’s first university, which have been recognised as
Documentary Heritage of the Memory of the World programme. The central
site of the Thang Long Royal Citadel has won the title “World Cultural
Heritage”.


The Giong festival is held annually in several parts
of northern Vietnam, most typically in the Phu Dong and Soc Temples in
Hanoi, to commemorate Saint Giong, one of the immortal quartets in the
Vietnamese legends.


Legend has it that under the sixth King
Hung’s reign (around 500 BC) Vietnam was threatened by the Kingdom of
Yin, to the north of Vietnam.


A little boy, who was unable to
crawl, roll over and say a single word at the age of three, had
surprisingly grown up to a giant man in just several days after getting
news on the foreign invasion. He used local bushes of bamboo to defeat
aggressors and flew into the sky with his iron horse after the final
victory.


In order to show their gratitude to the hero of Giong village, people proclaimed him Saint Giong.


The
festival meets all qualifications for an intangible cultural heritage
of humanity as it has been conserved by the community as part of the
national cultural identity, handed down from generations to generations,
holds creativeness of humanity and represents aspiration for prosperity
by every family and peace for the nation and the world.


The
Giong festival was among 46 candidates from 29 nations that UNESCO
recognised as intangible cultural heritage in 2010 after considering 113
dossiers submitted by 32 member nations./.

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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

VN’s festival in waiting list for intangible cultural heritage

Vietnam ’s Saint Giong Festival has been put among 47 nominations for
recognition as the world intangible cultural heritages by the UNESCO.


The list was announced by the UNESCO on Nov. 9.


At present, 166
heritages of 77 countries have been recognised as world intangible
cultural heritages. Vietnam has a number of heritages in this list,
including the Hue royal court music, the Gong space of Tay Nguyen
(Central Highlanders) and the Bac Ninh love duet singing.


Saint
Giong festival is a unique traditional event in Vietnam, held annually
from the 6th-12th of the fourth lunar month in many places in Vietnam to
commemorate the legendary national hero who grew from a 3-year-old
child into a giant overnight to help drive out invaders from the
country.


The 9th of the fourth lunar month is the major day for
the biggest Saint Giong festival at Phu Dong village in Gia Lam district
of Hanoi where this national hero was born.


The festival is a
chance for visitors to watch the performance of traditional rituals and
artistic activities which have been handed down from generations to
generations./.

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