Cultural events
celebrate New Year
HA NOI (VNS) - Water puppetry
and Dong Ho paintings are just two amongst Viet Nam's many traditional arts
selected to entertain locals and tourists alike during the Lunar New Year
holiday season in Ha Noi's Old Quarter.
Yesterday the festivities kicked off on Hang Bac
Street at the Kim Ngan Temple, a place where ancestors' traditional jewellery
craft are worshipped.
"We selected one of the essential
traditional arts, jewellery, to be highlighted during the spring festival
with an aim to preserve and promote the value of Viet Nam's cultural heritage
as well as stay true to the image of the Old Quarter," said Pham Tuan
Long, deputy head of the Old Quarter Management Board.
"This is the sixth time this kind of
festival has been organised; it has attracted not only Hanoians but also many
foreign tourists," he said, adding that, "we have invited two
representative artists of water puppetry and Dong Ho paintings to perform for
visitors."
Nguyen Dieu Trang, a fifth grader of Tran Nhat
Duat primary school, and her classmates were excited for artist Phan Thanh
Liem's water puppet show.
"I've enjoyed many water puppet shows
already; the shows are often about dancing lions, buffalos fighting, rice
farming or boat racing, but this was the first time I saw a story about traffic,"
she said.
"Now I know that water puppets can look like
normal men wearing hats and riding motorbikes, or policemen blowing their
whistles," she added.
Children became especially vocal when two young
male puppets where stopped by policemen for dangerously chasing each other on
motorbikes. During Tet celebrations, many locals do motorbike racing for fun,
but it often leads to traffic accidents.
"After the performance, our teacher told us
that we should obey traffic rules and especially during Tet holidays,"
Trang said.
Behind the water puppet stage, artist Nguyen Huu
Qua, from Dong Ho Village in Bac Ninh Province, displays traditional
paintings, the knowledge of which has been transferred from
generation-to-generation in his family.
Since the upcoming Lunar New Year is the year of
the Goat, Qua created a painting called Tam Duong Nghenh Phuc (Three Goats
Welcome Happiness) to celebrate. The image is of goats among apricot blossom,
a popular spring flower.
"I painted three goats since Vietnamese
people believe that a family with three people born in the Year of the Goat
make for a very happy and prosperous family," Qua said.
"The paintings have been used as traditional
decoration in homes during the spring festival," he said, "in
recent years, more and more people have been interested in buying Dong Ho
paintings for Tet."
Qua will display the art at the temple from now
till the end of the festival on March 10.
Old Quarter
At the ancient house of 87 Ma May Street,
visitors can see how a typical Ha Noi family prepares for and celebrates Tet.
Traditional music such as cheo (traditional
operetta), ca tru (ceremonial singing) and xam (music of blind buskers) will
be performed at the Ha Noi Old Quarter Information Centre at 28 Hang Buom
Street from February 19-22.
Ethnic spring festival
The Viet Nam Museum of Ethnology in Ha Noi will
organise a series of cultural activities to welcome in the Lunar New Year and
explore the diversity of ways ethnic minority groups will celebrate across
the country.
This year the Lao Cai Provincial Department of
Culture, Sports and Tourism will work with the museum to organise the events.
"On the occasion, we will introduce some of
the most unique traditions of ethnic groups in Lao Cai Province," said
Tran Huu Son, director of the department.
The museum invited Mong people from Sin Cheng
Commune of Lao Cai to erect cay neu (New Year's tree) on the museum ground.
The ceremony comes from Gau Tao, a typical festival of the Mong.
Giang A Hai, one of the Mong from Sin Cheng, said
the cay neu must stand straight toward the sun to bring forth the Mong's
prayers for happiness and prosperity in the new year. The tree is considered
a bridge to the gods and forefathers' spirits, travelling between Heaven and
Earth.
On the 23rd day of the last lunar month,
Vietnamese people usually hold a cay neu erecting ceremony in front of their
homes. Cay neu is believed to ward off evil spirits during the longest and
most important annual festival in Viet Nam. On the seventh day of the first
lunar month, the tree is finally taken down.
Several other sports and cultural activities by
other ethnic groups will also liven up the museum, such as shuttlecock
throwing, pipe-blowing and crossbow-shooting by the Mong; phao dat (clay
firecrackers) and Dong Ho paintings by the Kinh; and folk games by the Si La
and San Chay groups.
The festival programme will take place at the Viet
Nam Museum of Ethnology, Nguyen Van Huyen Street, on February 22-23. -VNS
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Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 2, 2015
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