Vietnamese Tet: A postcard from
‘Little
A
sign is seen in Little Saigon in this file photo. Tuoi Tre
I’m on a pre-Tet sojourn to visit family and friends and
do a little business before returning to our own Tet holiday down in Big
Saigon, the place of my wife’s birth. Being here, however, affords me a
chance to give Tuoi Tre News readers a glimpse of the Vietnamese
culture most haven’t witnessed: the vibrant Vietnamese American culture that
first took root near my hometown in the summer of 1975, after the exodus of
thousands of people from
With the 40th anniversary
of
Funny, but I remember how Americans, including myself,
were confounded by the name “Nguyen.” Many people here still mangle the
pronunciation. And yet, Nguyen is now among the most common names in
Back in the late 1970s and 1980s that wasn’t the case. From a few thousand
people at first, centered in the City of
It was fitting, perhaps, that the first wave of Vietnamese would settle in
Orange County, a place known for arch-conservative, flag-waving politics, a
mostly “white” suburbia and, of course, Disneyland, “the Happiest Place on
Earth.” Orange County happened to be the birthplace of President Nixon, and
he vacationed at his “Summer White House” at a beach town here – but that was
more of coincidence than a cause of OC’s political character, where the
anti-war crowd was a distinct minority and outnumbered by people associated
with large military bases and military contractors that were established
during World War II. I grew up here because my father, a career Marine who
had survived the attack on Pearl Harbor and the battle of
Of course there was some culture clash. I remember how
my father enjoyed the new ethnic humor:
Hey Dad, you hear about the
new Vietnamese cookbook? It’s called “101 Ways to Wok Your Dog.”
Little did we suspect that, in 1979, another Vietnamese
family would arrive and their eldest daughter would become my bride. Nor
could I have fathomed three decades later my future bride’s talent and drive
would take us, over time, from our wedding in Little Saigon to
Speaking of meals, after my father-in-law, Minh, picked
me up at
Some other reflections from Greater Little Saigon:
-- Tet in
-- Most of these Vietnamese American students today are
native-born Americans, the children of immigrants. But in addition to these
second-generation Vietnamese, more Vietnamese are arriving every year by the
thousands, some to make a new home in
-- The growing clout of Vietnamese American culture is such that two
-- Instead of jokes about “dog ranchers,” the ethnic
comedy is now more likely to be inspired by the familiarity of Vietnamese
nail salons that have flourished across
What do they really say? A Los Angeles Times reporter,
who is Vietnamese American, eavesdropped on the salon chatter and translated
it for a story. The second paragraph of her report went like this:
"Choi dat oi!" she said, turning to a co-worker. "Oh my God! This guy is so dirty. I thought he looked
clean. But he takes off the shoe and he is different."
SCOTT DUKE HARRIS, TUOITRENEW
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Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 2, 2015
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