Wednesday, October 6, 2010

HCMC may get institute for Indian cultural studies

 The University of Social Sciences and Humanities administration plans to establish an institute for Indian Cultural Studies, the Dean of Oriental Studies at the HCMC university said.

“In the near future, the faculty’s administrative staff will submit to the school’s board of presidents a plan for establishment of a center for Indian cultural studies,” Dean Hoang Van Viet said on Friday at this year’s Hindi celebrations at the university.

“We need cooperation from the staff, students of the faculty, support and  practical help from the Consulate General of India, Indian Business Chamber in Vietnam, individuals, Vietnam and Indian government and non-government organizations; especially, direct and regular guidance of the university’s board of presidents,” Viet said.

He said the University of Social Sciences and Humanities in HCMC would concentrate on improving the Oriental Studies department’s research and international cooperation.

Indian Studies officially became the seventh department of the Oriental Studies faculty in 2000, and the University of Social Sciences and Humanities in HCMC offers the only Bachelor of Arts majoring in Indian Studies in Vietnam. Nearly 80 students have graduated with the major and they all have stable jobs, Viet said.

Hindi language teaching is an important part of the department. Standard Hindi which is one of the 22 official languages of India is widely spoken there and used in the administration of 10 states of the country, comprising 41% of the population. The total number of Hindi speakers as the first or second language is up to 650 million worldwide, ranking second after English with 1.8 billion speakers and Chinese with 1.35 billion.

The U.S.A’s National Security Language Initiative launched in 2006 identified Hindi as a critical language, and the nation’s Federal Government provides a grant of nearly US$1 million annually for Hindi teaching in the American schools. 

Also at the event, Abhay Thakur, Consul General of India in HCMC, said, they would soon sponsor a visit for a senior professor from the University of Social Sciences and Humanities to India to visit the universities; bring an Indian senior lecturer to Vietnam; offer scholarships, as well as sponsor publication of a Vietnamese – Hindi dictionary.

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Vietnamese service providers win tourism alliance awards

Nine tourism and transportation service providers in Vietnam along with 18 companies in Laos and Cambodia have won the Tourism Alliance Awards 2010.

The prizes were given late last week during the sixth International Travel Expo in HCMC.

In the Vietnam category, HCMC, the biggest tourism center, was the biggest winner. The city has the Inbound Tour Operator of the Year- Saigontourist, the Outbound Tour Operator of the Year – Vietravel, the Business Hotel of the Year - Caravelle Hotel, the Luxury Hotel of the Year - Park Hyatt, the Budget Hotel of the Year- Palace Hotel Saigon, and the Restaurant of the Year - Li Bai (Sheraton Hotel).

Both of the other Vietnamese winners were located in the coastal city of Nha Trang - Resort of the Year - Six Senses Hideaway Ninh Van Bay and the Spa of the Year - Evason Ana Mandara.

The national airlines of Vietnam Airlines won the Airline of the Year award.

According to the organizing committee, around 80 service providers in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam were nominated for awards.

The three-day travel expo themed Three Countries - One Destination ended in the city on Saturday. The event was organized by the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, VINEXAD and IIR Exhibitions.

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Over 200 join Blood Donation Day

Over 200 donors take part in the Blood Donation Day at the Saigon Times Group in HCMC’s District 1 on Saturday morning
Tom Tobin, CEO of HSBC Vietnam, who is one of the first donors at the event, receives a blood-pressure check before giving blood
More than 200 people donated blood at the sixth Blood Donation Day at the Saigon Times Group at 35 Nam Ky Khoi Nghia St. in HCMC’s District 1on Saturday morning to mark the birthdays of The Saigon Times Daily and The Saigon Times Weekly.

The Daily began Oct. 2, 1995 while The Weekly began Oct. 10, 1991.

The event attracted local and foreign entrepreneurs, diplomatic corps, students, reporters and staff of the

Bambang S. Tarsanto, Consul General of Indonesia in HCMC, donates blood
Vo Tran Thao Tien, a donor from Binh Thanh District, begs doctors to allow her to give blood. The doctors say she needs to put on more weight before they will accept her blood.
Saigon Times Group.

“This is such a practical way to help not only people in need but also myself. After giving blood, I feel healthier and I’m so happy to take part in a meaningful social activity like this,” Consul General of Indonesia in HCMC, Bambang S. Tarsanto, who has donated blood 25 times, said

CEO of HSBC Vietnam, Tom Tobin, said, “This is the third time I have donated blood at the Saigon Times. Not only I but many HSBC staff also want to contribute something to the

One of the Movenpick Hotel staff gets on the scales before she gives blood
society, so this blood donation day is a good chance for us to join hands with the Saigon Times and the Red Cross to care for the community.”

“Donating blood to help poor patients is a meaningful activity. I’m ready to contribute my blood to save more people,” Le Ngoc Dao, deputy director of the HCMC Department of Industry and Trade said.

The donor day collected 217 units or 55 liters of blood - Photos: Le Toan
The donation day is held annually by The Saigon Times Daily and The Saigon Times Weekly in collaboration with the Vietnam Red Cross Chapter in HCMC, and sponsored by HSBC Vietnam and Pepsi Co Vietnam.

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The Hmong king’s palace in Ha Giang

The palace of Vua Meo, where the king of H’Mong lived last century in Dong Van Plateau, Ha Giang Province - Photo: Lam Van Son
On a tour of Ha Giang Province we visited Dong Van Plateau and decided to take a day to see the palace where the king of the Hmong people lived early last century.

The king of the Hmong lived in this palace in the early 20th Century
Often dubbed Vua Meo (king of H’mong), the palace’s official name is Vuong Chinh Sinh. The Hmong king ruled over a vast territory from Dong Van Plateau to Meo Vac Town.

During his reign, the charismatic king attracted a lot of attention when he and other Meo residents joined forces with Ho Chi Minh to gain national freedom.

The palace is in Sa Phin valley in Lung Phin Commune, Dong Van District at the base of a mountain, backed by cliffs and topped by a mass of clouds.

Tall sa moc trees surround the palace that is built from stone, fir wood and terra-cotta tiles in the Chinese architectural style of the Man Qing era.

Our first impression was of a small market called Sa Phin market at the palace gates and a parking lot run by H’Mong people, many of whom are descendents of Vua Meo.

Covering a total area of 1,120 square meters, the palace was used as a residence and fortress during the Vuong Dynasty.

The two storey, 50 meter long palace that took eight years to build has four long houses and six wide houses with 64 rooms for the king’s wives, children and soldiers.

All the walls are 50-60 centimeters thick. Surrounding it is stone barrier which is 2 meters high and 80 centimeters thick.

The palace is divided into many areas such as dining room, bed room, kitchen, marijuana store, rooms of his wives, a prayer altar and an area for criminal executions.

After entering the main gate, we passed about four smaller gates to explore the site. There are two fortresses.

No one lives at the palace anymore but it has been well maintained by the provincial government. It contains wardrobes, fireplace, beds, flour-mill, crossbow and pan-pipe.

Still largely un-restored the palace is a great place to learn about the province’s interesting history.

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Monday, October 4, 2010

Stone plateau declared world geopark

Dong Van Stone Plateau in the northern mountainous province of Ha
Giang has been recognised as a member of the Global Network of
National Geoparks (GGN).


The news was announced by
the Vietnamese delegation attending the European Geoparks Conference in
Lesvos , Greece , on Oct. 3.


The plateau has now
become the first geological park in Vietnam and the second geological
park in Southeast Asia after Langkawi Geological Park in
Malaysia.


The GGN proposed Vietnam develops a
master development plan to encourage people to preserve cultural and
geological heritage values together with local sustainable development.


The park is expected to eliminate poverty through sustainable economic development in Ha Giang province.


The document on Dong Van Stone Plateau was among six dossiers approved at the conference.


Dong
Van, which has remained untouched for hundreds of millions of years,
has mammoth rocks spread over four districts – Quan Ba, Yen Minh, Meo
Vac, and Dong Van – and is 1,000m above sea level.


The
plateau is made up of at least 80 percent limestone and has fossils of
thousands of species of ancient creatures from 400-600 million years
ago.


It is also home to several cultures that sprung up
over the centuries. The 574-sq.km plateau now has 250,000 people
belonging to 17 ethnic groups./.

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New ideas in traditional craft village tourism

Traditional craft village development potential, solutions to developing
tours to craft villages and bringing into play cultural heritage values
of handicraft villages were presented at an international seminar in
Hanoi on Oct. 4.


At the seminar, Head of the
National Administration of Tourism (NAT) Travel Department Vu The Binh
said that each heritage and traditional craft village contained
attractive and new interests for tourists.


Tourists can understand Vietnam ’s culture, beliefs and history through tours to heritages and villages, he said.


Many traditional crafts have been restored thanks to the development of traditional craft villages for tourism.


Representatives of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)
in Vietnam said that JICA would assist the development of
sustainable self-reliant communities through heritage tourism.


The project which will be carried out for four years until 2014 is
intended to improve the living conditions of people in Duong Lam ancient
village in Hanoi , Phuoc Tich ancient village in the central province
of Thua Thien-Hue and Dong Hoa Hiep in the Mekong delta province of
Tien Giang .


The seminar was jointly held by
NAT and the Hanoi People’s Committee on the occasion of the Thang
Long-Hanoi International Tourism Festival, to mark the capital city’s
millennium./.

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Cavernous splendor

A forest of stalactites that tells a thousand stories awaits visitors at Thien Duong Cave



Thien Duong (Paradise) Cave, formed around 300 to 400 million years ago, dazzles visitors

From the historic Ho Chi Minh Road (former Ho Chi Minh Trail), you veer off on a path

through dense forest for about four kilometers, then you climb 519 rocky steps, and you’re in... heaven, well, Paradise.

Thien Duong (Paradise) Cave, labeled the world’s most beautiful and magnificent cave when it was discovered in the central province of Quang Binh in 2005, has been open to tourists since September 3.

Located in the middle of Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site in Quang Binh, the cave was formed around 300-400 million years ago, surrounded by underground streams and rocky mountains.

It is impossible not to be amazed at the huge stalactite structures of different shapes, with some mounds climbing more than 50 meters inside a cave that is about 60 meters high.

The cave is 30-100 meters wide, with the widest point measuring 150 meters, according to the British Caving Association, the Governing Body for Underground Exploration in the UK. There are two stalactite pillars, each about five meters high and a rock arch around 100 meters wide. Take a deep breath before you go further to prepare yourself for what is ahead, or you will think you have stepped into a primitive forest that aged into stalactite.

Stalactites that look like temples, cranes with their arched necks looking up to the sky and a pine tree with hundreds of branches are dotted throughout this underground world. With a little imagination, there is no end to the shapes to be found in the cave.

HOW TO GET THERE?

By plane/train: From Hanoi to Dong Hoi Town. Then take a car to Thien Duong Cave which is 35 kilometers away.

By car: From Hanoi, go along the National Way No.1 for just over 400 kilometers to Dong Hoi Town, and another 35 kilometers to Thien Duong Cave. Or, take Ho Chi Minh Road from Nghe An Province. A path to the cave is located at the 16th km milestone. It is five kilometers long through the Phong Nha - Ke Bang National Park. The first two kilometers can be covered by the car. For the remaining three kilometers, Truong Thinh Company asks you to use environmentally friendly vehicles like the electronic bike, bicycle or to go on foot.

What’s more, around Thien Duong Cave are dozens of stalactite mounds 30-50 centimeters tall, resembling Buddha statues, some of them with diameters of more than a meter. One stalactite structure looks like the communal house of the Central Highlands people.

The ground water in the cave has, over millions of years, shaped stones into coins, neatly covering the slopes as though someone has carefully arranged them.

Deeper into the cave is an area where stalactites form a sand table.

The temperature in the cave is always at between 20-21 degrees Celsius, cooling you instantly as you step in from outside temperatures of 36-37 degrees Celsius.

Howard Limbert, a member of the British Caving Association, says Thien Duong Cave might be the longest dry cave in Asia.

British explorers found the cave in 2005 thanks to a local resident, Ho Khanh. Khanh has in fact made it somewhat of a hobby to find new caves.

He discovered the world’s largest cave Son Doong, in 1991 and claims to have discovered dozens of caves in the national park over the years.

Thien Duong Cave is around 36 kilometers long but the cave “developer”, Hanoi-based tourism and resort operator Truong Thinh, only allows visitors to go about 500 meters into it. The company introduces it as one of the destinations in a tour starting at the Sun Spa Resort in Dong Hoi Town and ending at the Tam Co Cave – a historic site where a group of young volunteers were killed by US bombs in 1972.

Given the number and shape of its stalactite formations, people say Thien Duong Cave is more beautiful than the famous Phong Nha and Thien Son caves in the area that attract many tourists.

The floor of the cave is a soft, sticky kind of soil. The slightest sound is echoed by the walls of the cave.

Listen carefully, and you may be able to hear the whispers of thousands of stories being told.

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