Vietnamese
village given final warning to stop pig slaughter ritual in public
The northern
province of Bac Ninh is once again showing great determination to make a
local pig slaughter festival less gory, after continued backlash from both
local and international communities.
The annual event,
which is coming very soon, will be closely watched, officials said.
Luu Dinh Thuc, vice chairman of the province’s capital
town, also named Bac Ninh, said the authorities have ordered Nem Thuong
villagers to make a few changes to their centuries-old tradition and avoid
killing animals in front of the public.
“The villagers have basically agreed to at least move
the slaughtering to somewhere discreet, but we are not sure things will go a
hundred percent according to our plan,” Thuc said at a press conference on
January 27
His lack of confidence is not without good reason.
Last year, local
officials did fail to stop the killings in public although they had issued a
lot of orders, after the Hong Kong-based Animals Asia Foundation criticized
the festival as “extremely cruel” and ignited strong opposition across
Vietnam.
“Both the director and the deputy director of the
province’s culture department were there, but at the last minute, the
villagers still killed a pig right in front of everyone.”
The festival last year was attended by thousands of people,
including many children.
This year, Thuc said, officials in charge of the village
will have to take responsibility if the ritual happens in public again.
Nem Thuong villagers celebrate the festival on the sixth
day of the first lunar month, which is February 13 this year, to commemorate
a general who took refuge in the area while fighting invaders a thousand
years ago. He killed wild hogs to feed his soldiers, hence the tradition of
slaughtering pigs.
Traditionally, villagers parade two pigs around before
beheading them for blood. They then wet money notes with the fresh blood and
put them on the altars in their houses to pray for good crops and health.
The festival has been facing criticism and opposition
since 2012 but the villagers have refused to give up their tradition.
Thuc said the province has been organizing many
conferences about the festival over the past year, inviting Nem Thuong’s
elderly villagers in an attempt to change the way they conduct the festival.
“It’s very hard to change people’s view about their
traditions. We need time and constant persuasion."
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Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 1, 2016
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