| Vietnam
as a country, not a war.... !
Country
short facts
Location: South East Asia
Full country name: Socialist
Republic of Vietnam
Area: 329,566 sq. km (128, 527
square miles - roughly the area of Italy or Japan),
neither boot-shaped nor gathering hundreds of
islands. A huge "S" lying half-facing
the Pacific Ocean as per a proud local expression
Population: More than 80 million
(Growth Rate 1.2%)
Capital city: Hanoi (population
4 million).
People: 85% ethnic Vietnamese,
3% ethnic Chinese, also Khmer, Cham (a remnant
of the once great Indianised Champa Kingdom) and
members of some 55 ethno-linguistic groups.
Languages: Vietnamese, French,
Chinese, English and a variety of Mon-Khmer and
Malayo-Polynesian local dialects.
Government: Sole-party Socialist
Republic under the leadership of the Communist
Party. Important persons to name are the Party's
General Secretary (Mr. Nong Duc Manh), the country's
president (Mr. Tran Duc Luong), the Prime Minister
(Mr. Phan Van Khai). The leading offices are Politburo
and National Assembly.
Economy: Market-based economy.
Third world leading rice exporter and coffee exporter
(wow!!). Other exported goods are rubber, tea,
crude oil, coal, and electricity.
Short
facts on culture and history
Four great philosophies and religions
have shaped the spiritual life of the Vietnamese
people: Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism and Christianity.
Over the centuries, Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism
have melded with popular Chinese beliefs and ancient
Vietnamese animism to form what is known as Tam
Giao (or 'Triple Religion').
Vietnamese (kinh) is the official
language of the country, although there are dialectic
differences across Vietnam. There are dozens of
different languages spoken by various ethnic minorities
and Khmer and Loatian are spoken in some parts.
The most widely spoken foreign languages in Vietnam
are Chinese (Cantonese and Mandarin), English,
French and Russian, more or less in that order.
Popular artistic forms include:
traditional painting produced on frame-mounted
silk; an eclectic array of theatre, puppetry,
music and dance; religious sculpture; lacquerware
and ceramics.
Vietnamese cuisine is especially
varied - there are said to be nearly 500 different
traditional dishes that include exotic meats (but
consider carefully before you eat a rare animal)
and fantastic vegetarian creations (often prepared
to replicate meat and fish dishes). However, the
staple of Vietnamese cuisine is plain white rice
dressed up with a plethora of vegetables, fish
(which is common in Vietnam), meat, spices and
sauces. Spring rolls, noodles and steamed rice
dumplings are popular snacks, and the ubiquitous
soups include eel and vermicelli, shredded chicken
and bitter soups. Fruit is abundant; some of the
more unusual ones include green dragon fruit,
jujube, khaki, longan, mangosteen, pomelo, three-seed
cherry and water apple. Vietnamese coffee (ca
phe phin) is very good; it's usually served very
strong and very sweet.
Vietnam's main festival of the
year is the Lunar Calendar New Year ("Tet")
which often falls in mid-Feb. For 5 days to a
week most of businesses closed except tourist
points. Flower markets every where before the
Eve. Temples and shrines are exciting with traditional
anniversaries and pilgrims before and after Tet.
Transportation is booked solid during this time.
See more of Vietnam festivals here
Pre
20th Century History
The sophisticated Bronze Age Dong Son culture
emerged around the 3rd century BC. From the 1st
to the 6th centuries AD, the south of what is
now Vietnam was part of the Indianised kingdom
of Funan, which produced fine art and architecture.
The Hindu kingdom of Champa appeared around present-day
Danang in the late 2nd century and had spread
south to what is now Nha Trang by the 8th century.
The kingdom existed in part through conducting
raids in the region. The Chinese conquered the
Red River Delta in the 2nd century and their 1000-year
rule, marked by tenacious Vietnamese resistance
and repeated rebellions, ended in AD 938 when
Ngo Quyen vanquished the Chinese armies at the
Bach Dang River.
During the next few centuries,
Vietnam repulsed repeated invasions by China,
and expanded its borders southwards from the Red
River Delta, populating much of the Mekong Delta.
In 1858, French and Spanish-led forces stormed
Danang after several missionaries had been killed.
A year later, Saigon was seized. By 1867, France
had conquered all of southern Vietnam, which became
the French colony of Cochinchina.
Modern
History
Pro-independence forces, dominated largely by
the leadership of Ho Chi Minh, resisted French
domination during and after WWII. Ho Chi Minh's
declaration of Vietnamese independence in 1945
sparked violent confrontations with the French,
culminating in the French military defeat at Dien
Bien Phu in 1954.
The negotiation of the Geneva
Accords of 1954 between the Vietnamese and the
French temporarily divided the country into two
zones (the Communists assumed control of the north
and the anti-Communist, US-supported Ngo Dinh
Diem took the south). Free elections were to have
been held across the country in 1956, but Diem
reneged on the plan - Ho Chi Minh seemed likely
to win - and instead consolidated his own power
in various ways, including fixing a referendum.
Western powers embraced his government.
Political and ideological opposition
quickly turned to armed struggle, prompting the
USA (who'd been a covert presence since at least
1945)and other countries to commit combat troops
in 1965. The Paris Peace Agreements, signed in
1973, provided an immediate cease-fire and the
withdrawal of US troops - signalling a famous
victory for Ho Chi Minh. Saigon eventually capitulated
to the Communist forces on 30 April 1975.
Going straight from the fat into
the frying pan, Vietnam had barely drawn breath
from its war with America when it found itself
at loggerheads with Khmer Rouge forces along the
Cambodian borders. A protracted round of fighting
eventually saw China enter the fray in support
of Cambodia and the killings continued until the
UN brokered a deal, with Vietnamese forces being
pulled out of Cambodia in 1989. Although the Khmer
Rouge continued to snipe from the borders, it
was the first time since WWII that Vietnam was
not officially at war with any other nation. The
end of the Cold War and the collapse of the USSR
in 1991 caused Vietnam and Western nations to
seek rapprochement.
Recent
History
In July 1995 even the intransigent USA re-established
diplomatic relations with Hanoi, although Hanoi
initially refused to sign trade agreements with
the US in 1999 (this was finalised the following
year). The US, on their part, talked about normalising
relations but over 25 years later there's still
a lot of soul-searching, hand-wringing and post
mortems going on, accompanied by a slather of
angst-ridden films and a handful of unplugged
guitar tunes. John McCain, on a visit to Hanoi,
talked about 'the wrong guys winning the war'.
Vietnam went through something of a postwar economic
boom, before suffering the economic setbacks that
plagued the entire region when the foreign investment
bubble burst in the late 1990s. It has recently
recovered part of this ground, and some pundits
predict it will be the next Asian 'tiger' economy. |