Showing posts with label Association of Vietnamese Expatriates in Cambodia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Association of Vietnamese Expatriates in Cambodia. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Celebrating 40 years of rocky relations between Vietnam and Cambodia, filled with invasion, occupation, and violation of Cambodia sovereignty

21-06-2007
Cambodian culture week to be held in Viet Nam

VNS

A Cambodian Culture Week will be held in HCM City, Binh Duong and Soc Trang provinces from next Monday to Saturday to celebrate 40 years of formal diplomatic relations between Viet Nam and Cambodia.

Some 35 representatives from Cambodia are participating in the event, which is being jointly organised by Viet Nam’s Ministry of Culture and Information and Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts. Among activities planned for the celebration will be a performance of Apsara dancing, recognised by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage of the world. The four dances that make up Apsara have earned world wide recognition.

In HCM City, there will be an exhibition entitled Cambodia – Land, People and Traditional Culture. On display will be various images of the country - its landscape and people, in addition to examples of traditional Cambodian wedding dress, antiques, handicrafts and unique sculptures in bronze, brass, silver and stone.

In HCM and Can Tho cities, there will be free screenings of four Cambodian films, including the classic Virtuous Mother, which is standard teaching materials in Cambodian secondary schools and won second prize in Cambodia’s National Film Festival in 2005.

"This cultural week is the product of the two countries’ co-operation. It aims to boost the traditional friendly ties between the Vietnamese and the Khmer people," said Le Tien Tho, Vietnamese Deputy Minister of Culture and Information.

Cambodian Culture Week in Viet Nam will also provide an opportunity for artists and actors from the two countries exchange experiences and preserve and develop the cultural identities of the two countries.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

By Vietnam's press own admission, Cambodia's Tonle Sap lake is invaded by swarm of Vietnamese fishermen

Thursday, February 8, 2007
A tough go for Vietnamese on floating houses in Cambodia

Thanh Nien News (Vietnam)

The largest freshwater lake in Southeast Asia, the Tonle Sap in Cambodia swarms with fishermen of Vietnamese origins eking out their daily existence on floating homes in extreme hardship.

Around 30km south of Pursat province, in Krako district, Thanh Nien newspaper met Nguyen Thi An, who said her family has always clung to fishing on this lake, also known as the Great Lake.
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"Asked why they did not return to Vietnam since life is so hard here, Huynh Luy, president of the expatriates association explained that the repatriates would not have legal papers once in Vietnam, besides it will be very difficult for their children to be admitted to schools there."
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When Cambodia was at war years ago, she returned to Vietnam for shelter, and after the guns were silenced, she returned.

Apart from a black and white TV set, she owns practically nothing of value. Her eight children are all into fishing.

According to a commune official, over 6,000 people of Vietnamese origins live in the region, all on boats, sometimes dubbed floating houses.

Though there are no addresses here and their houses can literally move anytime and dock anywhere, an unwritten rule on location is deeply engrained.

Accordingly, boats that are tattered will be allowed by their sturdier counterparts to dock next to the shore, those in good condition dock further out and so on. This is understandable, as weak, makeshift boats cannot bear big waves far offshore.

Visiting this shoreward “houses” is a sore sight. Rows of dilapidated boats inched their way deep against the bank.

Tran Thi Hanh, 36 years old, owns what can at best be called the trunk of a boat. She had to hold the boat together with nylon bags to prevent it from breaking apart and water from seeping through.

She recalled one day when she was robbed, literally, of hook, line, and sinker and had to loan from her poor neighbors before her goods were sequestered.

Her husband had to hire himself out to ruthless employers.

Drawing on her painful experiences, she tipped Thanh Nien how to win a job interview.

“When an interviewer asked ‘are your eyes potato eyes or human eyes’, if the answer is human eyes, you will be disqualified. It must be potato eyes as they are always open. Then you have to work nearly 24 hours a day”

Poor opportunity for children

This lake also has schools offering elementary education. Nguyen Viet Dat proudly owns a school but his like many others is simply an 18 sq.m plank on a fishing vessel where students from 1st to 5th grade cramp inside.

Dat said textbooks are few and far between. Three and four students thus have to share one book. However, even this is better than a few years ago when he had to write everything on the blackboard as there was no book.

His school did not have any textbooks until recently when the Association of Vietnamese Expatriates in Cambodia supplied a few.

He said his “school” is still better than three others which received no support from the association and have to do without books.

Schools here only taught elementary education. Those wanting to further their education have to return to Vietnam or enroll in a more decent, pukka school in Cambodia.

Very few were able to do that, he added.

Of the 600 children here, only one-third attend “school”.

His heart seemed to skip a beat when asked about the incoming Tet or the Lunar New Year, a traditional, major holiday for the Vietnamese coming in nine days time.

This year, business is not good, fishermen suffer losses and so there’s little of Tet here. “Whenever Tet is mentioned, all of us feel sad and miss our homeland”.

Asked why they did not return to Vietnam since life is so hard here, Huynh Luy, president of the expatriates association explained that the repatriates would not have legal papers once in Vietnam, besides it will be very difficult for their children to be admitted to schools there.

Reported by Thanh Dong - Translated by A.N.O.N