Vietnam Has Been Described As “A Fashion Maven's Paradise.” HO

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vietnam Has Been Described As “A Fashion Maven's Paradise.” HO Vietnam has been described as “a fashion maven’s paradise.” HO CHI MINH CITY – When the second of two Indo-China wars finally ended in 1975, who would have dreamed that war-ravaged Vietnam would become one of the most “in” destinations for western tourists and that American and French Jews, as well as Israelis, would be flocking to this Southeast Asian land. And the number keeps rising. According to Rabbi Menachem Hartmen of Chabad Jewish Center, now in its second home in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon), about 20,000 Jewish tourists, business persons and Israeli government officials – including President Shimon Peres on an official state visit this past November – tour this country of an estimated 90 million persons every year. Vietnam today is a very “in” place. Historic pagodas and the graceful curves of French colonial buildings, structures with Chinese motifs and American-style high rises dot cities and countryside. Hotels and restaurants have been returned to the private sector. The tourist industry is growing at almost 20 percent annually. And millions of visitors are drawn to this land each year. One reason is that Vietnam has been described as “a fashion maven’s paradise.” Indeed it is not uncommon for tourists to actually buy an extra suitcase for purchases. After visiting Saigon’s Ben Thanh market this seems like a prudent move: booth after booth, section upon section of clothes, textiles and tchotchkes – everything imaginable. Walking the now peaceful streets of Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC), I realized what other travel writers before me understood: this metropolis on the Saigon river remains fast- moving and exciting, especially in the large ethnic Chinese section, Cholon, which adds to the city’s cosmopolitanism. The sounds and pace of Saigon get to you immediately, frenetic, energetic, hectic and loud, a reminder of New York City or Tel Aviv. During long walks in the early evening, I notice streets packed with pedestrians. At night, tourists flock to the Rex Hotel at the corner of Le Loi and Nguyen Hue boulevard, and ride up to the popular rooftop bar which during the Vietnam War served as a watering hole for journalists. The view is magnificent; this is after all, “the Paris of the Orient.” Down below you can observe the rivers of motor bikes moving through city streets. Every visitor to Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi remembers those “darn” motorbikes. Stand at any corner and you, too, will be mesmerized by the swarms of motor bikes, their bee-like sounds ringing in your ears. Getting across major intersections is like trying to dodge the traffic swarming around Paris’ Arc de Triomphe. Today’s scooter-propelled youth hold no animosity for Americans or Westerners. The war’s long over. People in the city and country want to become a prosperous nation, not a battlefield. This is good, especially for American seniors who though cognizant of the nearly four-decade interval in historical memory since the end of the Vietnam conflict, note that today, the two former combatants, (the US and Vietnam) now hold joint naval maneuvers in the South China Sea. Still, the Vietnamese government does not want its populace to forget its battle with the French and Americans. Tourists quickly learn that history often belongs to the victor. At the War Remnants Museum and the famous Cu Chi tunnels, visitors are shown propaganda films, observe captured American war booty and underground passageways. The war also was covered extensively in Israel, including articles by Moshe Dayan who in 1966 commented on the conflict for Israeli newspapers and often went out with US Marine reconnaissance patrols. But that was yesterday. Today, this Communist government has long opened to the West and offer Vietnam visa to tourists easily, bringing opportunities to American Jewish and Israeli entrepreneurs, including at least several dozen Israeli companies; as well as Israeli doctors working in clinics and treating burn victims, for instance. Approximately 300 Jews declare Vietnam as their temporary home. Amazingly, in six decades of foreign travel, I had never come across a Jewish community where the entire kehila, including the rabbi, is from somewhere else. About 200 Jews reside in Ho Chi Minh City and 100 in the capital, Hanoi. According to Rabbi Hartman, one-third are American expats, one-third Israelis and one-third from throughout the world. Many of the Americans are engaged in what is commonly known as “the shmate business, a flashback to the days when New York’s island of Manhattan was the world capital of the garment industry. Welcoming Jewish tourists and residents in HCMC is Chabad Jewish Center, now in its second home at Nguyen Dinh Chieu St. 5A (Villa) District 1, Ho Chi Minh City. Rabbi Hartman, who was born in Kiryat Malachi, and his wife Rachel have three children, Levi, Chaim and Effi. He says that while there is intermarriage among the expats, there are no converted Vietnamese Jews. He pointed out in an interview that the “Vietnamese like us; they welcome us, because they like to think of themselves as the Jews of Asia, as well as nation of the book.” Kosher food can be obtained at Chabad every day. The organization supplies kosher meals for singles or groups at their hotels in Ho Chi Minh City. Friday night and Saturday morning services attract many, as do all the holiday celebrations. More than 60 people show up for the Friday night Shabbat meal. Activities are offered at Chabad, including a woman’s group, a Torah study group, a youth group, a singles group, a weekly Hebrew school which includes art classes, and weekly classes for adults. While visiting Vietnam, I participated in the Second Seder, (less formal than the First, which was attended by about 150 persons in a large center city hotel). American businesspersons and tourists, Israeli backpackers and French students agreed that Vietnam was certainly an exotic community to recall the exodus from Egypt, as well as a place, far, far from home. At the seder, I learned that not everyone is here to make money, at least outwardly. Some, I am told, have fled what one might call the “American drive for the almighty dollar.” They desired to escape American life and its so-called “proverbial rat race.” They have been drawn to the perceived, exotic Vietnamese way of life. Rabbi Hartman opened the first Chabad center in 2006 when there were about 60 Jews in Vietnam. Before he came, chabbadniks went from city to city, making contacts and finding out Jewish names. He claimed there were about sixty Jews in Vietnam in 2006. Jews, of course, arrived in Vietnam before the US Army and before Chabad. They entered Indochina with the French in the latter half of the 19th century and settled in Saigon. In the 1880s Jewish soldiers and officers fought in the French Army in the Tonkin campaign. In 1939, the total Jewish population in Haiphong, Hanoi, Saigon and Tourane numbered about 1,000 individuals, as well as 80 Jews in Tonkin. They would suffer under Vichy France. After World War II, with the return of French Republic rule, an estimated 1,500 Jews called Vietnam their home, a home which they fled with the after the disastrous battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954. Plans are in the making to establish a Chabad center in Hanoi, though even now, the organization sponsors activities in the capital of this country, a country which certainly is cognizant of its cultural diversity, due in no small part to its geographical location. Vietnam is situated on the eastern portion of the Indochinese peninsula, bordered on the north by China, on the west by Laos and Cambodia, and on the east by the South China Sea. Vietnamese children are taught in school that their country takes the form of an elongated letter “S.” So, tourists should not linger too long in Saigon. Visit the country’s beautiful beaches, trek through hills and valleys. Fly or drive to the ancient capital of Hue to see the Citadel; it’s quieter there. Move on to Hanoi where visitors attend a performance at Thang Long Water Puppet Theater. Stroll around Hoan Kiem Lake. Shop in the Old Quarter. Cruise in Halong Bay, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Travelers are constantly lined up in front of the mausoleum of Ho Chi Minh, the Communist leader of North Vietnam. I recalled that in previous years, I had visited the embalmed Lenin in Red Square, and Mao Tse-tung in Tiananmen Square in Beijing. On my trip to Vietnam, I paid a visit to see Ho. And no, he does not roll over in his tomb at the sight of so many Americans and Westerners lined up to view him in state. Indeed, a small example that interest in Vietnam has risen is that the “Southeast Asia through Jewish Eyes Tour,” led by Rabbi Marvin Tokayer, creator of the “Journey Through Jewish Eyes” travel program has increased in numbers to the Far East, including Vietnam. I hope he tells him to watch out for the motorbikes. Source: www.dulichso.com .
Recommended publications
  • Paul Frenchfrench the OLD SHANGHAI A–Z
    PaulPaul FrenchFrench THE OLD SHANGHAI A–Z 14/F Hing Wai Centre All rights reserved. No portion of 7 Tin Wan Praya Road this publication may be reproduced Aberdeen or transmitted in any form or by any Hong Kong means, electronic or mechanical, www.hkupress.org including photocopy, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in © Paul French, 2010 writing from the publisher. ISBN 978-988-8028-89-4 Cover design and page layouts by British Library Cataloguing-in- Alex Ng Kin Man, Twin Age Limited Publication Data. A catalogue record Email: [email protected] for this book is available from the British Library. Printed in China by Twin Age Limited, Hong Kong 2 THE OLD SHANGHAI A–Z Contents How to Use This Book .............................................................................6 Road Names Index – Past to Present .....................................................8 Road Names Index – Present to Past ..................................................26 The Flag and Seal of the Shanghai Municipality ..............................44 Road Names as History and Politics ...................................................46 The Boundaries ......................................................................................48 Building Shanghai’s Roads ....................................................................62 The Name Changing Begins .................................................................67 International Settlement A-Z ...............................................................72
    [Show full text]
  • Persistence Or Reversal of Fortune? Early State
    PASXXX10.1177/0032329217704431Politics & SocietyFoa 704431research-article2017 Politics & Society 2017, Vol. 45(2) 301 –324 Persistence or Reversal © 2017 SAGE Publications Reprints and permissions: of Fortune? Early State sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav https://doi.org/10.1177/0032329217704431DOI: 10.1177/0032329217704431 Inheritance and the Legacies journals.sagepub.com/home/pas of Colonial Rule* Roberto Stefan Foa University of Melbourne Abstract This article assesses the relative merits of the “reversal of fortune” thesis, according to which the most politically and economically advanced polities of the precolonial era were subject to institutional reversal by European colonial powers, and the “persistence of fortune” view, according to which early advantages in state formation persisted throughout and beyond the colonial era. Discussing the respective arguments, the article offers a synthesis: the effect of early state formation on development trajectories was subject to a threshold condition. Non-European states at the highest levels of precolonial political centralization were able to resist European encroachment and engage in defensive modernization, whereas states closest to, yet just below, this threshold were the most attractive targets for colonial exploitation. Since the onset of decolonization, however, such polities have been among the first to regain independence and world patterns of state capacity are increasingly reverting to those of the precolonial era. Keywords colonialism, state formation, state capacity, decolonization,
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Polities, Modern States
    Ancient Polities, Modern States The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Foa, Roberto. 2016. Ancient Polities, Modern States. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:26718768 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA Ancient Polities, Modern States A dissertation presented by Roberto Stefan Foa to The Committee on Degrees in Government in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the subject of Government Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts January 2016 c 2016 – Roberto Stefan Foa All rights reserved. Thesis advisor Author James A. Robinson Roberto Stefan Foa Ancient Polities, Modern States Abstract Political science is concerned with the study of polities. However, remarkably few scholars are familiar with the polities of the premodern era, such as Vijayanagara, Siam, Abyssinia, the Kingdoms of Kongo or Mutapa, or the Mysore or Maratha empires. This dissertation examines the legacies of precolonial polities in India, during the period from 1707 to 1857. I argue that, contrary to the widespread perception that the Indian subcon- tinent was a pre-state society, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were a time of rapid defensive modernization across the subcontinent, driven by the requirements of gunpowder weaponry and interstate warfare among South Asian regimes and against European colonial powers.
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief History of Vietnam
    A Brief History of Vietnam Prehistory Inhabited by human beings for hundreds of thousands of years, the area of Southeast Asia now called Vietnam was the site of a civilization that engaged in agriculture and pottery-making as early as 6,000 BC, roughly the same time such activities began in the city-states of ancient Mesopotamia. During this period, a succession of dynasties ruled the structured society that developed among the varied and changing ethnic groups living in the region. The Emergence of Vietnam The rulers of the Trieu dynasty (207-111 BC), the first to identify themselves as Vietnamese, governed a kingdom called “Nam Viet” encompassing parts of what is now Guangdong in southern China as well as the northern portion of what is now Vietnam. Chinese Domination and Vietnamese Rebellion (111 BC–939 AD) In 111 BC, Chinese troops invaded Nam Viet, established new territories and installed Chinese officials to govern the area, except for portions of the highlands where some of the original Vietnamese nobles managed to retain control. Chinese domination of the region continued for a thousand years, interrupted periodically by Vietnamese revolts. In 40 AD, the Trung Sisters led a successful rebellion against the Chinese, recapturing much of northern Vietnam. When one of the sisters proclaimed herself Queen, the Chinese Emperor sent a large army to quell the revolt. After a long, difficult campaign, the Chinese suppressed the uprising in 43 AD and the Trung Sisters committed suicide to avoid capture. Ever since, the sisters have been revered in Vietnam as exemplars of sacrificial service to the nation.
    [Show full text]
  • Crossing Cultural, National, and Racial Boundaries: Portraits of Diplomats and the Pre-Colonial French-Cochinchinese Exchange, 1787-1863
    CROSSING CULTURAL, NATIONAL, AND RACIAL BOUNDARIES: PORTRAITS OF DIPLOMATS AND THE PRE-COLONIAL FRENCH-COCHINCHINESE EXCHANGE, 1787-1863 Ashley Bruckbauer A thesis submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Art. Chapel Hill 2013 Approved by: Mary D. Sheriff Lyneise Williams Wei-Cheng Lin © 2013 Ashley Bruckbauer ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ii ABSTRACT ASHLEY BRUCKBAUER: Crossing Cultural, National, and Racial Boundaries: Portraits of Diplomats and the pre-colonial French-Cochinchinese Exchange, 1787-1863 (Under the direction of Dr. Mary D. Sheriff) In this thesis, I examine portraits of diplomatic figures produced between two official embassies from Cochinchina to France in 1787 and 1863 that marked a pre- colonial period of increasing contact and exchange between the two Kingdoms. I demonstrate these portraits’ departure from earlier works of diplomatic portraiture and French depictions of foreigners through a close visual analysis of their presentation of the sitters. The images foreground the French and Cochinchinese diplomats crossing cultural boundaries of costume and customs, national boundaries of loyalty, and racial boundaries of blood. By depicting these individuals as mixed or hybrid, I argue that the works both negotiated and complicated eighteenth- and nineteenth-century divides between “French” and “foreign.” The portraits’ shifting form and function reveal France’s vacillating attitudes towards and ambivalent foreign policies regarding pre-colonial Cochinchina, which were based on an evolving French imagining of this little-known “Other” within the frame of French Empire. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This thesis would not have been possible without the support and guidance of several individuals.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Dictionary of World War II France Historical Dictionaries of French History
    Historical Dictionary of World War II France Historical Dictionaries of French History Historical Dictionary of the French Revolution, 1789–1799 Samuel F. Scott and Barry Rothaus, editors Historical Dictionary of Napoleonic France, 1799–1815 Owen Connelly, editor Historical Dictionary of France from the 1815 Restoration to the Second Empire Edgar Leon Newman, editor Historical Dictionary of the French Second Empire, 1852–1870 William E. Echard, editor Historical Dictionary of the Third French Republic, 1870–1940 Patrick H. Hutton, editor-in-chief Historical Dictionary of the French Fourth and Fifth Republics, 1946–1991 Wayne Northcutt, editor-in-chief Historical Dictionary of World War II France The Occupation, Vichy, and the Resistance, 1938–1946 Edited by BERTRAM M. GORDON Greenwood Press Westport, Connecticut Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Historical dictionary of World War II France : the Occupation, Vichy, and the Resistance, 1938–1946 / edited by Bertram M. Gordon. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0–313–29421–6 (alk. paper) 1. France—History—German occupation, 1940–1945—Dictionaries. 2. World War, 1939–1945—Underground movements—France— Dictionaries. 3. World War, 1939–1945—France—Colonies— Dictionaries. I. Gordon, Bertram M., 1943– . DC397.H58 1998 940.53'44—dc21 97–18190 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright ᭧ 1998 by Bertram M. Gordon All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, without the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 97–18190 ISBN: 0–313–29421–6 First published in 1998 Greenwood Press, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Abrams, Creighton Williams Jr. 605–606 Administration French
    Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-87586-8 - A History of the Vietnamese K. W. Taylor Index More information INDEX Abrams, Creighton Williams Jr. 605–606 Agroville Program 576–577 Administration Altan Khan 243 French Cochinchina 464 An Duong 14–17 French Indochina 481–482 An Nam Protectorate 38–39 Han dynasty 17–20 Analects 162 Ho Quy Ly 169 Ang Chan 409–410, 413–415, Le dynasty 187, 189, 212–216 427–428 Ming dynasty 178 Ang Chi 325, 329–330, 332–333 Minh Mang 418–419 Ang Duong 428–429, 431–432, 453 Nguyen Ang Eng 371, 373–374, 409 17th century 268–271 Ang Im (18th century) 320, 322–325 18th century 326, 331 Ang Im (19th century) 428–429, 431 Nguyen Phuc Anh/Gia Long 382 Ang Mei 429, 431 Tran dynasty 112–113, 135 Ang Nan 305–306, 319–320 Trinh Ang Snguon 409–410 17th century 310, 312–313 Ang So see Barom Reachea VIII 18th century 349–350, 358–360 Ang Tan 304–306 Agrarian Policy Ang Tong Reachea 303–304 Democratic Republic of Vietnam 566–568, Angkor 93, 123 571 Annamese Middle Chinese Language 5–6, Dong Son Culture 18 24, 50 French Cochinchina 463–464 Annals of the Three Kingdoms 15–16 Han dynasty 15, 20–21 Ap Bac Battle 585 Ho Quy Ly 159, 169 Au 16, 18–19 Le dynasty 190, 202, 218–219 Au-Lac 16–17 Liu Song dynasty 33 Aubaret, Louis Gabriel Galderec 465 Ly dynasty 95–96 Avalokitesvara 71 Minh Mang 417 Ngo Dinh Diem 563–564 Bac Son Uprising 525–526 Second Republic of Vietnam 610 Bach Dang River Battles Socialist Republic of Vietnam 617 938 46 Tang dynasty 37, 40 980 48 Tran dynasty 126–127, 150–151 1076 83 Trinh 1288 136 17th century 316–317, 342 Baeck, Pieter 297–298 18th century 345–348, 351–352, 357, Bao Dai 361, 371–372 king 501, 512–513, 533, 538 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-87586-8 - A History of the Vietnamese K.
    [Show full text]
  • September 30 to October 9, 2010 Frederic Wood Theatre
    eatre at UBC Presents September 30 to October 9, 2010 Frederic Wood Theatre September to Oober , - : pm Frederic Wood eatre, UBC Preview, Sept. Tickets: | | Call -- Photo: Tim Matheson Tim Photo: theatre.ubc.ca Come and enjoy a night out en français! presents Une Maison face au nord by Jean-Rock Gaudreault October 20-23, 2010 “One of the top 10 plays of the past decade” © Jean Brland Toronto Eye Weekly 2010-2011 SEASON: SUBSCRIBE TODAY! INFO/BOX OFFICE: 604-736-2616 - [email protected] www.seizieme.ca 10 11 VAncouVER EAST culTuRAl cEnTREe after You can now the quake buy your Haruki Murakami Theatre at Tickets Oct 13 - 23 from $15! Based on “Honey Pie” & “Superfrog Saves Tokyo” from the novel after the quake by Haruki Murakami. UBC tickets Adapted for the stage by Frank Galati thecultch.com 604.251.1363 online! Produced by Pi Theatre & Rumble Productions Illustration by Edward Kwong The Leon and Thea Koerner Sponsored by Thanks to Foundation theatre.ubc.ca Follow Theatre at UBC http://www.twitter.com/TheatreUBC on the web! http://www.flickr.com/theatre_ubc http://www.facebook.com/TheatreUBC http://www.youtube.com/TheatreUBC The Madwoman of Chaillot by Jean Giraudoux Translated by Maurice Valency Directed by Stephen Heatley September 30 to October 9, 2010 Frederic Wood Theatre The University of British Columbia Department of Theatre and Film Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication The Madwoman of Chaillot : a Theatre at UBC companion guide / by Jean Girau- doux; translated by Maurice Valency. Compiled and edited by Jennifer Suratos. Includes bibliographical references.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Polities, Modern States
    Ancient Polities, Modern States The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Foa, Roberto. 2016. Ancient Polities, Modern States. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University, Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:26718768 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA Ancient Polities, Modern States A dissertation presented by Roberto Stefan Foa to The Committee on Degrees in Government in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the subject of Government Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts January 2016 c 2016 – Roberto Stefan Foa All rights reserved. Thesis advisor Author James A. Robinson Roberto Stefan Foa Ancient Polities, Modern States Abstract Political science is concerned with the study of polities. However, remarkably few scholars are familiar with the polities of the premodern era, such as Vijayanagara, Siam, Abyssinia, the Kingdoms of Kongo or Mutapa, or the Mysore or Maratha empires. This dissertation examines the legacies of precolonial polities in India, during the period from 1707 to 1857. I argue that, contrary to the widespread perception that the Indian subcon- tinent was a pre-state society, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were a time of rapid defensive modernization across the subcontinent, driven by the requirements of gunpowder weaponry and interstate warfare among South Asian regimes and against European colonial powers.
    [Show full text]
  • The Battle of Camerone
    The French Foreign Legion’s Fight to the Death: The Battle of Camerone The Recit du Combat de Camerone, is a tale recounted aloud around the world to Legionnaires on every post by the senior officer or senior noncommissioned officer present. It is commemorated each year by the French Foreign Legion on April 30, the anniversary of this battle. Camerone was first celebrated on February 16, 1906, weather this was deliberate or not, the result of the decision was to award a Légion d'Honneur to the 1er Régiment Etranger in a ceremony that would eventually take place on April 30. During that same year it was changed and celebrated on it's proper anniversary. During the war years, 1914-1918, up to 1920, Camerone was celebrated for reasons unknown. But, by 1920 the celebration of Camerone became an attempt to link the "New Legion" with the old one. The institutionalization of Camerone was established by General Paul Rollet, known as the Father of the Foreign Legion, he meant to establish this ceremony as a historical link between the "old" and the "new" Legion, and it was also a commemoration to those men who sacrificed their lives to the Foreign Legion. On April 30, 1931, General Rollet, made it official by inviting dignitaries, generals, foreign officers and delegates to Sidi-bel-Abbès, Algeria, (the home of the Legion until 1962) to be part of the celebration. The ceremony opened up with a parade of all the Legion's units led by the pioneers, a recitation of an account of the battle and the appearance of the wooden hand of Captain Jean Danjou, paraded in a glass reliquary, as the Legion band played what is now the official version of the Legion march "Le Boudin", the high point of the 1931 celebration was the unveiling of the Monument aux Morts---a large metal globe upon which Camerone is marked by a gold star, and all the countries in which the Legion has campaigned are highlighted in gold, it sits on top a square marble base, surround by four legionnaires at each corner.
    [Show full text]
  • NGUYỄN-CATHOLIC HISTORY (1770S-1890S) and the GESTATION of VIETNAMESE CATHOLIC NATIONAL IDENTITY
    NGUYỄN-CATHOLIC HISTORY (1770s-1890s) AND THE GESTATION OF VIETNAMESE CATHOLIC NATIONAL IDENTITY A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History By Lan Anh Ngo, M.A. Washington, DC March 2, 2016 Copyright 2016 by Lan Anh Ngo All Rights Reserved ii NGUYỄN-CATHOLIC HISTORY (1770s-1890s) AND THE GESTATION OF VIETNAMESE CATHOLIC NATIONAL IDENTITY Lan Anh Ngo, M. A. Thesis Advisors: Peter C. Phan, Ph.D., and James A. Millward, Ph.D. ABSTRACT The historiography of Vietnamese Catholicism has tended not only towards a polemical French-centric narrative but also one in which the local converts rarely have a voice. Nguyễn’s dynastic chroniclers, in the first wave of scholarship, portrayed Catholics as instigators of rebellions and followers of a so-called heterodox cult. In the late nineteenth century, French missionary historians often patronizingly cast Vietnamese Catholics as passive recipients of the Catholic faith in an internally united and supportive community created by the sacrifices of missionaries in a hostile external world. Subsequently, mainstream scholars, journalists and popular writers of the Cold War era, along with Vietnamese state-sponsored researchers after 1975, were interested in proving the collaborative role of Catholicism in the period of European expansionism. Current historiography, spearheaded by scholars trained at Australian National University in the 1980s, has gradually moved from a binary polemic to a more nuanced view of the past through the perspective of regionalism. And the research from this local-centered angle no longer views Catholicism as a separate, external force but as an integral part of nation-building.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cult of Village Guardian Deities in Contemporary Vietnam: the Re- Invention of a Tradition
    University of Wollongong Research Online University of Wollongong Thesis Collection 1954-2016 University of Wollongong Thesis Collections 2016 The cult of village guardian deities in contemporary Vietnam: the re- invention of a tradition Nguyễn Gia Hùng University of Wollongong Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/theses University of Wollongong Copyright Warning You may print or download ONE copy of this document for the purpose of your own research or study. The University does not authorise you to copy, communicate or otherwise make available electronically to any other person any copyright material contained on this site. You are reminded of the following: This work is copyright. Apart from any use permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process, nor may any other exclusive right be exercised, without the permission of the author. Copyright owners are entitled to take legal action against persons who infringe their copyright. A reproduction of material that is protected by copyright may be a copyright infringement. A court may impose penalties and award damages in relation to offences and infringements relating to copyright material. Higher penalties may apply, and higher damages may be awarded, for offences and infringements involving the conversion of material into digital or electronic form. Unless otherwise indicated, the views expressed in this thesis are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Wollongong. Recommended Citation Hùng, Nguyễn Gia, The cult of village guardian deities in contemporary Vietnam: the re-invention of a tradition, Doctor of Philosophy thesis, School of Humanities and Social Inquiry, University of Wollongong, 2016.
    [Show full text]