Life in Vietnam


Sunday, 25/02/2018 15:40

Festivals nationwide ring in glorious spring

Ride your luck: According to popular belief, anything bought at the Vieng market would bring good luck to the buyer to the whole year. — VNS/VNA Photos Quy Trung
Viet Nam News

HA NOI — Three major spring festivals – the Mother Au Co Temple Festival, the Tinh Dien (Ploughing) Festival and the Vieng Market Festival – began on Thursday, as part of the festive season in the north of Viet Nam.

Run by Ha Hoa District’s People’s Committee in the northern province of Phu Tho from the seventh to the ninth day of the first lunar month, the Mother Au Co Temple Festival pays tribute to the guardian deity and prays for peace, good weather, prosperity and happiness. 

The worship of Mother Au Co at the temple, practised in numerous forms, including worshipping Mother Au Co and her children, was recognised as national intangible cultural heritage in 2017. The temple was built under the reign of King Le Thanh Tong (15th century) and named a national historical and cultural relic in 1991. 

The ploughing festival 2018 in Doi Son Commune in the Red River Delta province of Ha Nam, which highlights the importance of agriculture and the role of farmers, and contributes to preserving and upholding cultural values of the locality, was also celebrated on the same day.

The event included a variety of activities, including dragon dance, drum performances, the enactment of the ritual when the King ploughs the field at the festival, traditional procession and decorating the buffalos with colourful paints. The festival began in 987 during the Le dynasty when King Le Dai Hanh went to the field to plough in Doi Son Commune, Duy Tien District to wish for bumper crops. The practice then became an annual tradition held through many dynasties. 

Another festival in northern Viet Nam during spring, the Vieng Market Festival, in which the market goers exchanged products, opened Thursday night in Vu Ban District in Nam Dinh. All kinds of goods are bought and sold without bargaining. People come to the market not only to buy things, but also to seek for fortunes and wish for a prosperous new year.

The spring market features handicrafts, antiques (both genuine and fake), household utensils, farm tools and many kinds of ornamental plants. Besides visiting the market, shoppers can also visit pagodas and temples nearby to worship Mother Goddesses and pray for prosperity. 

Viet Nam has about 8,000 festivals each year. Of which, nearly 90 per cent are traditional festivals, 6 per cent are religious and 4 per cent are historical.VNS

Blink and you’ll miss it: The Vieng market opened at midnight of the 7th day and lasted only through the morning of the 8th day. — VNA/VNS Photo Quy Trung
Shiny: Vieng Spring Market features handicrafts, antiques (both genuine and fake), household utensils, farm tools and many kinds of ornamental plants. — VNA/VNS Photo Quy Trung
Colourful: A ritual at the opening ceremony of the Au Co Temple festival. — VNA/VNS Photo Trung Kien
Bang the drum loudly: Drum performance at the Tich Dien (ploughing) festival 2018 in Doi Son Commune, the Red River Delta province of Ha Nam. — VNA/VNS Photo Quy Trung

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