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Holidays
Sunday is a holiday for all state Institutions.
There are also 8 other holiday each year:
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January
1st: 1 day
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April 30th Saigon Liberation Day: 1day.
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May 1st International Labour Day: 1 day
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September 2nd National day of the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam: 1 day
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Traditional Tet: 4 days (usually occurs
between Januany and February. The holiday begins
from the evening of the previous lunar year and
lasts until the third day of the new year.)
Celebrations
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February 3rd: Foundation day of the Communist
Party of Vietnam
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May 19th: Birthday of President Ho Chi Minh
Festivals
in the North of Vietnam
TET
NGUYEN DAN
(The Lunar New Year)
Tet has become so familiar, so sacred to the
Vietnamese that when Spring arrives, the Vietnamese,
wherever they may be, are all thrilled and excited
with the advent of Tet, and they feel an immense
nostalgia, wishing to come back to their homeland
for a family reunion and a taste of the particular
flavours of the Vietnamese festivities.
Tet starts on the first day of the first lunar month
and is the first season of the new year (according
to the lunar calendar), and therefore it is also
known as the Tet Nguyen Dan, literally meaning Fete
of the First Day, or the Tet Tam Nguyen, literally
meaning Fete of the Three Firsts.
The Vietnamese, wherever they may be, are all
thrilled and excited with the advent of Tet, and
they feel an immense nostalgia, wishing to come back
to their homeland for a family reunion and a taste
of the particular flavours of the Vietnamese
festivities. Those who have settled down abroad all
turn their thoughts to their home country and try to
celebrate the festivities in the same traditional
way as their family members and relatives to relieve
their nostalgia, never forgetting the fine custom
handed down from generation to generation.
The Tet of the New Year is, above all, a fete of the
family. This is an opportunity for the household
genies to meet, those who have helped during the
year, namely the Craft Creator, the Land Genie and
the Kitchen God. As the legend goes, each year on
December 23 of the lunar calendar, the Kitchen God
takes a ride on a carp to the Heavenly Palace to
make a report on the affairs of the household on
earth and then returns on December 30 to welcome the
New Spring.
Tet is also an opportunity to welcome deceased
ancestors back for a family reunion with their
descendants. Finally, Tet is a good opportunity for
family members to meet. This custom has become
sacred and secular and, therefore, no matter where
they are or whatever the circumstances, family
members find ways to come back to meet their loved
ones
TET
THUONG NGUYEN (Nguyen Tieu)
According to Buddhist sutras, the first and the
fifteenth days (Tet Nguyen Tieu) of every lunar
month are Buddha's Days, when acts of worship are
performed in Buddhist shrines and before family
altars. Joss-sticks are lit and trays of fruit and
other offerings are laid out. Celebrations related
to the lunar New Year are over, but the festive Tet
atmosphere still remains. The weather is mild
despite an occasional drizzle, pagodas and temples
are crowded with old people telling their beads,
young people praying for happiness in love and luck
in business, parents wishing for health and
prosperity to their children... Fruit and delicacies
offered to Buddha are taken back home to be
distributed to all members of the family as "gifts"
from the deities.
In traditional astrology the fate of each person is
influenced by one particular star. On the 15th day,
an act of worship is performed to the star before a
three-level altar. On the top level, offerings of
incense and food are made to Heaven and Buddha; on
the middle level they are made to the tutelary star;
on the lowest level are various foods, including
rice gruel, which are offered to the "wandering
souls".
The origins of the sacred character of this
particular date are unclear. One version has it that
on the occasion of the first full moon of the year,
the emperor of China used to offer a lavish banquet
to the most prominent scholars of the country, who
would compose poetry to the glory of the monarch, as
well as to the beauty of nature.
Indeed in the eyes of men of letters, the moon is at
the height of its beauty on that night. Unable to
reproduce such moonlight as described by the writer
through the lens of camera, we would like to present
our readers a few pictures of pilgrims at the Quan
Su pagoda in Hanoi on the fifteenth day of the first
moon of the year. Whatever its origins, one thing is
certain: on this day the heart of everybody is
turned to a vision of peace and happiness.
TET KHAI HA
Khai Ha is organized on the seventh day of the first
lunar month on which the owner offer their ancestors
paper money and clothes and says farewell to them.
The neu bamboo pole is lowered and a new yearis
welcomed. According to Vietnamese thinking, if the
weather is warm and the sun is shining on Khai Ha,
man will be healthy and fortunate all the year
round.
TET DOAN NGO
Held on the 5th day of the 5th lunar month, Tet Doan
Ngo is also called Parasite-Killing Festival. This
is a mid-year festival to enhance the prevention of
evils and illnesses, and the memory of the
ancestors.
TET TRUNG NGUYEN
Also called "All Souls Day", is on the 15th day of
the 7th lunar month. On this day, people always come
to the pagodas to make lavish offerings to the
wandering souls.
TET TRUNG CUU
Or the Double Nine Fete (on the 9th day of the 9th
lunar month) comes from China. On this occasion, the
Confucian scholars used to take a stroll up the
mountains, sipping chrysanthemum liquor. Today, very
few localities celebrate this festival.
TET TRUNG THAP
Or the Double Ten Festivies (on the 10th day of the
10th lunar month) is in fact the harvest festival.
As for physicians and traditional herbalists, it is
the day when the medicinal herbs can absorb both the
positive and the negative of the universe.
TET TAO QUAN
The Vietnamese have a custom of seeing off Ong Conga
(the Land Genie) and Ong Tao (the Kitchen God) on
the 23rd day of lunar December. Both go to Heaven to
brief Ngoc Hoang (the Jade Emperor) on the life of
the owner of the house where they stay, and pray for
luck, prosperity and happiness. On New Year's Eve,
both Gods will come back to earth and continue their
routine duty of looking after the kitchen of the
house.
The custom of worshipping Ong Conga and Ong Tao
originated from a myth that dates from ancient time.
There was a couple, so poor that they had to go far
away to earn their living. They lost each other.
After a long time of unsuccessfully looking for her
husband, the wife married another man. One day, her
old husband unintentionally called at her house to
beg for food. The old couple recognized each other.
Feeling sad and embarrassed at the situation and
unfaithful to the old husband, the wife jumped into
the fire and burned to death. The old husband, sorry
for the wife, also jumped into the fire, as did the
new husband. Hearing about their faithful love, the
jade Emperor permitted the three of them to live
together as the Kitchen God to enjoy the blessings.
On the Ong Cong and Ong Tao festival day, people
usually prepare steamed sticky rice with sugar
porridge, truncated cone-shaped cookies made of
sticky rice, incense joss sticks and flowers for a
worshipping ceremony. They also prepare a basin of
water in which they put one big live carp or three
small ones. After the ceremony, the carp are
released into the pond or the river. This custom has
two meanings. First, as popular thinking goes, the
carp can swim well and it will pass Vu Moon
(Heaven's gate) to become a dragon. Thus, Ong Cong
and Ong Tao ride a carp, i.e. a dragon, to heaven.
Second, the custom of releasing the carps refers to
a custom of releasing animals, such as birds into
the air and the beasts into the forest , which is
considered a kindhearted deed to pray for good luck.
The custom of worshipping Ong Cong and Ong Tao as
the Land Genie and Kitchen God has a humanist value,
reflecting the family happiness. The fire in the
kitchen manifests not only the cozy family union,
but also the bumper harvest and agricultural
development.
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Festivals
in the North of Vietnam
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Festivals
in the Center of Vietnam
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Festivals
in the South of Vietnam
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