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Talks of additional elections to fill Vietnam’s 500 legislature seats

May 26, 2016 by tuoitrenews.vn

Some provinces and cities in Vietnam are seeking permission to hold additional elections after preliminary results of the national ballot to select members of the lawmaking National Assembly on Sunday showed that the number of deputies elected was fewer than the expected 500.

Eligible citizens across the country cast their votes on Sunday to elect 500 members to Vietnam’s lawmaking National Assembly for the 2016-2021 tenure.

Vietnam’s National Election Council said it had received reports from provincial and municipal election committees stating that the quota of assigned seats after vote counting had not been met.

Among the affected localities are Can Tho City and Soc Trang Province, which lacked two and one deputies respectively.

According to Vietnamese laws, a candidate must receive no less than 50 percent of the valid votes to be eligible for a seat in the assembly.

If more candidates than the assigned number of deputies for a province or city acquire 50 percent of the valid votes, the winners will be selected from top down in terms of their number of votes.

Heads of the election committees of Can Tho and Soc Trang have confirmed that they had requested to hold additional elections to fill the assigned seats.

Chief of the National Election Council Office Nguyen Hanh Phuc said in an interview on Monday with Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that it was up to the council to decide on a case by case basis whether or not they allow a province or city to hold additional elections.

“The National Election Council will base their decision on the overall picture of the National Assembly as well as the specific conditions of those locales that are short of elected deputies,” an election expert said. “If a constituency is assigned two seats in the National Assembly but only one candidate won enough votes, then it would deeply affect the representation of that constituency.”

Phuc said the additional elections must be held no later than 15 days after the first election, citing Vietnamese laws.

“In the additional election, voters will only choose among candidates in the initial lists who had failed to accumulate enough votes in the first election. Those who win more votes than the others with no less than half of the valid votes will be the winners,” Phuc said.

Meanwhile, other provinces that failed to reach the quota had opted not to request any additional election.

The Election Committee of Dong Nai Province in southern Vietnam said that despite being one deputy short of the assigned 12 seats, the province had asked for no additional election, saying its constituency is not affected by the shortage.

Likewise, Hoang Van Chat, Party chief and chairman of the People’s Council of Son La Province in northern Vietnam, said the stance of his province is not necessarily to hold additional ballots.

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Filed Under: Politics Vietnam Life - Talks of additional elections to fill Vietnam’s 500 legislature seats, election talk, vietnam 500 nam tram dong

Spring blooms across Vietnam

February 8, 2021 by e.vnexpress.net

Spring Photo Contest 2021, hosted by HCMC Photography Association (HOPA), attracted 374 participants with 3,480 photos. With the theme “Vietnamese Spring”, the jury selected 80 photos for exhibition, including one first prize, two second prizes, three third prizes and five consolation prizes. The award ceremony took place in early February in Ho Chi Minh City.

“Spring Love” by Tran Anh Tuan won first place. Tuan said he took the photo when he met an old couple chatting joyfully while carrying a peach blossom branch home to celebrate Tet in Duong Lam ancient village, Hanoi.

The second prize winner is Ho Van Thai Hoang’s “Spring Sunshine”, taken in District 5, HCMC.

“On a spring day, I was going out with my camera as usual. When I heard the sound of a drum at a temple from afar, I quickly went there, observed the activities and decided to shoot from a high angle. That feeling is special,” Hoang said.

Another second prize is Nguyen Son Tung’s “Tet Gathering”, taken in Ai Quoc Commune, Loc Binh District, Lang Son Province.

The author said the Tet reunion has an important meaning that everyone cherishes. This is a day to reunite with your loved ones.

Tet (Lunar New Year), Vietnam’s biggest holiday, peaks on Feb. 12 this year.

“Trieu Khuc Village Festival” by Bui Dang Thanh won the third prize.

The festival in Thanh Tri District, Hanoi was recognized as a National Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2019. The festival is held on lunar Jan. 9-12 every year, to commemorate national hero Phung Hung, a chief and military leader during the 8th century.

A highlight of this festival is when boys dress up in colorful women’s clothes, and with chalky cheeks and lipstick, perform a traditional dance.

“Simple Happiness” by Le Hong Duc won the third prize. In the photo is a H’mong family of Lao Xa Village, Dong Van District, Ha Giang Province.

“Spring Afternoon” by Tran Ngoc Dung, an aerial view of HCMC’s central District 1, also won the third prize.

“Spring Wharf” by Nguyen Thanh Tung won a consolation prize, capturing the spring flower market from above at Binh Dong Wharf, District 8, HCMC. Tet flower boats moored closely together create a colorful photo.

“Christmas in Hanoi” by Pham Van Hoc is a another consolation award winner.

Nguyen Duc Phuoc’s “Little Spring” also won a consolation prize. It was taken at the West Lake flower valley in Tay Ho District, Hanoi.

“Go Cong Flower Garden” was shot by Duong Cong Son and won a consolation prize.

“Spring is Here” by Bui Dang Thanh, which also scooped a consolation prize, was captured in Sung La Commune, Dong Van District, Ha Giang.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Spring blooms across Vietnam - VnExpress International, Spring blooms across Vietnam, azaleas that bloom in spring and fall

Japanese Technology by FUTUREK SG Takes Singapore’s Street Food Culture Closer to the People

February 9, 2021 by bizhub.vn

Launch of digital platform WAK WAK HAWKER for all things hawker-related

SINGAPORE - Media OutReach - 9 February 2021 - FUTUREK SG PTE. LTD., a digital creative agency that works with the latest technology from Japan, launches a new website service, WAK WAK HAWKER (WWH). The platform aims to provide locals and tourists with a comprehensive guide to Singapore’s hawker culture and information at their fingertips.

 

Singapore’s First Dedicated Digital Platform for Hawker Centres

 

WWH bridges information of hawker centres across the country to become a database which users can quickly access to decide their next meal.  With hawker centres being hallowed in the Unesco list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2020, WWH aims to preserve their legacy by promoting the historical, cultural, economic and social value of this national asset.

 

Users can easily access information about hawker centres and individual stalls (distinct shops helmed by hawkers), as well as a Search feature that locates hawker centres from nearby landmarks and filters stalls based on food category. The UX/UI design of the platform was only achieved after extensive research of gourmet and food websites around the world. The team had only one goal in mind — “How will the platform help users to decide where and what to eat?”

 

The platform is enhanced with insights from everyday Singaporeans who view hawker culture as a way of life. Whether they are diners, hawkers themselves or hawker centre owners, get a glimpse of their world through article content based on interviews with these personalities. Along with data about hawker centres and hawker stalls, these feature content are updated regularly.

 

Mr Akiyasu Takaseki, Chief Operating Officer at FUTUREK SG and leader of the WWH development project, shares “I often frequent hawker centres since moving here because I found this idea of dining intriguing, and almost disjointed, from my preconception of Singapore as a modern city-state.”

 

“The first time I ever ordered food from a hawker centre, I struggled with understanding the menu, deciding what to order, and communicating with the hawkers since some of them only speak Mandarin. While this ritual gave me anxiety, I found that locals could easily chat up “aunties” and “uncles” at the hawker stalls while ordering their food using a colloquial language that was a mix of English and Mandarin. They would even order dishes that were not on the menu! There was obviously a “hawker literacy gap” between the locals and me.”

He continued, “After a few months, some of the stall owners started to show interest in me and we started chatting. From these conversations, I learned of the dedication to their craft, their passion for cooking and got insider information such as hidden menu items and new dishes that they were experimenting with.”

 

As Mr Takaseki delved deeper into hawker culture and the people behind it, he discovered the magnitude of their significance in the historical and cultural landscape of Singapore. He launched the production of WHH with the hopes of sharing the magic of hawker centres with people everywhere, regardless of their level of hawker literacy.

 

“WAK WAK” means to “walk around” in Singlish (colloquial Singaporean English) and “excited” in Japanese. WAK WAK HAWKER was coined to mean exactly that — for users to walk around hawker centres and get excited.

 

“I hope that people try a new hawker cuisine or explore new hawker centres with the help of the platform. Many Singaporeans may not be aware of the full significance of hawker centres, so I hope that it serves both foreigners and Singaporeans and enables them to appreciate hawker culture even more.”

 

Key Features of WWH

Besides specialising in hawker culture as a gourmet information platform, WWH has some other key features in terms of functionalities.

 

1.      Foodie meets high-tech design

The UX and UI design are intended for users to easily access hawker information they need. The team analysed gourmet websites and implemented their findings with the reliable technical capabilities of the engineering team.

 

2.      Accurate information backed by on-the-ground research

Who knows hawker centres better than the “aunties” and “uncles” at the stalls? Local university students were activated to interview these profiles across hawker centres to consolidate accurate data.

 

At the time of the launch as of 9th February 2021, WWH has information on about 20 hawker centres and about 1,000 stalls across the island. Data is constantly being updated.

 

3.      Harvesting data, one review at a time

WWH allows users to leave a review of up to 300 characters and to give a rating based on 5 stars. By amassing information from the public and providing rating indications, the platform is given more credibility and relevance.

 

More in-house services under WWH are in the midst of development.

 

To visit WAK WAK HAWKER, please visit: https://wak-wak-hawker.com/en *

*Only for smart devices

 

Website: https://wak-wak-hawker.com/en

About FUTUREK SG PTE. LTD.

FUTUREK SG is a digital creative company that responds to client marketing issues with reliable technology engineering. The company undertakes a large number of digital development operations, not only for advertising promotions that require digital solutions but also for the core of each client’s business, such as development of applications or E-commerce websites.

www.futurek.sg

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Media OutReach, japanese food culture, japanese culture food, Singapore Street Food, singapore chinatown food street, japanese street food, Singapore Food Street

Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong

February 11, 2021 by sggpnews.org.vn

Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 1 When the crew arrived in front of the commune’s community house, they saw an empty gravel lot with a makeshift goal and white chalk lines that outline the field.
They were greeted shortly by a flock of ethnic women in black dyed dresses, two-pieced blue shirts and cloth headgears that keep their hair neatly in place, with the only non-traditional accessories being the fabric sneakers.
Each team consisted of seven women who knew exactly what they were doing and did not mind bumping into each other while taking and passing the ball.

Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 2

Among the spectators of locals are the footballers’ husbands cheering them on and shouting out directions while still holding their babies.
20 minutes flew fast and the women took a halftime break to chat and get some refreshment, some even casually breastfeed their baby.
One of the youngest females of the group is La Thi Thao, a 16-year-old girl from Na Ech Commune. “My parents and big brother all play football, so I want to join the football team at both my school and the community house. I hope more of my school mates would take up sports to improve their health and stay away from problematic hobbies”, she said.
Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 3
According to local official Nguyen Van Duoc, football has only been popular among female San Chay people for about five years, and over 80 percent of the 2,600 in Huc Dong Commune are of the San Chay ethnicity.

Although it is not a traditional sport, Huc Dong authorities have encouraged and promoted female football within the commune, and it has since become a staple of local tourism.
On the subject, the UNESCO Representative to Vietnam Michael Croft, during his business trip to Quang Ninh, expressed his appreciation for the natural beauty and unique culture of Huc Dong as well as the ethnic women’s football match. According to Croft, these football matches are an expression of gender equality and a smooth combination of traditional costumes and international sports which should be preserved.
“San Chay women harbor a genuine love for sports even when they had to spend their whole life working in the mountains. But now they can embrace football as a way to improve their physical and mental health, and also promote the unique cultural beauty of local ethnic groups and tourism”, said Mr. Duoc.
Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 4 Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 5
Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 6 Female ethnic footballers at Huc Dong ảnh 7

By staff writers – Translated by Tan Nghia

Tags:

San Chay ethnic women football Huc Dong Quang Ninh province

Filed Under: Uncategorized San Chay, ethnic women, football, Huc Dong, Quang Ninh province, Photo Gallery, female footballers wages, female football team, female football

Tết inspires foreigners

February 12, 2021 by vietnamnews.vn

Lê Hương & Vân Anh

Việt Nam News chats with some foreigners about their Tết (Lunar New Year) experience in Việt Nam.

Saadi Salama, Ambassador of Palestine to Việt Nam

This is my 19th Tết in Việt Nam in the past 40 years that I have a close relationship with the country and 18 years I have worked and resided in Việt Nam between the periods of 1980-1984, 1989-1992 and since 2010 up to present.

My first Tết in Việt Nam impressed me most and I will never forget it. In the last lunar day in the 1980s, I saw strange things in Việt Nam that I had not seen in the previous three months.

I took a walk around the Old Quarter. I watched branches of peach blossoms and tried to understand their meaning. The last lunar day of that year was a special day when people flocked to Hoàn Kiếm Lake to welcome the Lunar New Year. At that time, on New Year’s Eve, the sound of crackers echoed here and there all over the city brought me strange feelings. I started to understand more about Vietnamese customs.

A friend of mine told me on the first day of the new year, I should not invite anyone home or go out as people care a lot about the first person to enter their home.

I think the atmosphere of the Tết in 1980-85 was more cheerful and meaningful even than today as Tết was a chance for people to enjoy what they have done in the past year.

Salama is the ambassador with the longest tenure in Hà Nội. Photo courtesy of the ambassador

Industrialisation is an encouraging sign for economic growth but it also contributed to the fading of traditional Tết features.

Vietnamese Tết has national features, not religious features like in Palestine. But both peoples take great care of family reunions, enjoy parties together, wish one another good luck and give one another lucky money.

I can describe Vietnamese Tết in some words: solidarity, humanity, kindness and forgiveness.

Though Tết happens on only some days, but during that time, everyone wants to return home to welcome the new year with their families. From mountains to busy cities, all ethnic groups in the country long for the traditional Tết festival and maintain the customs. That’s the solidarity.

When the Lunar New Year arrives, people forget sorrows, hatred, spare good words to one another and share things with needy people. That’s the humanity and forgiveness of the Tết .

I hope Việt Nam will maintain her success in dealing with the pandemic so that in the new lunar new year we will return to normal life as before the pandemic. Việt Nam has been a good example in not only controlling COVID-19 but also in gaining a considerable GDP growth in comparison with other nations.

I hope 2021 will be a year that the whole world will be free of COVID and live in peace.

As a Palestinian, I desire peace for my country as that in Việt Nam.

Amanda Carlea, Canadian, content manager, Vietnam Tourism Advisory Board

My first Tết in Việt Nam was back in 2015, it was a marvel to witness.

The excitement of everyone and the transformation of the city (especially the traffic!) was quite a whirlwind.

I still love to this day when the cherry blossom branches start appearing all over Hà Nội.

To me, it’s a sign of some well earned time off and the anticipation of a new lunar year. I usually love to spend my Tết exploring a new place in Việt Nam, when the roads are empty and people flock to their hometowns.

Amanda Carlea enjoys Tết in Phú Yên. Photo courtesy of Amanda

I find the spirit of Tết is always so very generous and welcoming.

One Tết I spent in Sa Pa my guide was constantly providing me with shots of rice wine mid-hike and answering his calls with ” Chúc Mừng Năm Mới !”

When in Phú Yên Province, I was the first guest at a city hotel and shared snacks and tea with the family in the morning.

That afternoon, I went to Bãi Môn beach and sat in the sunshine reading, before an older gentleman offered me lì xì and gave me a handshake and kind words. I love the sense of a new beginning at Tết , so much so I stopped caring as much about New Year’s Eve, as it’s not the real deal until Tết arrives!

I hope this year we will see the outbreak in Việt Nam fully contained, reunite with friends and travel again freely and safely. I will spend mine at home in Hà Nội, going for walks and enjoying the time I have with my partner.

Sonya Firsova, Russian, singer

This year’s Tết will be our third in Việt Nam.

Our first Tết holiday was in 2018 in HCM City. That year HCM was very beautiful during Tết , the whole Nguyễn Huệ walking street was filled with beautiful flowers plants and statues made of flowers.

All people were wearing beautiful colourful áo dài and it was really one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen in my life.

During the Tết holidays, almost all families were singing karaoke at home and having a wonderful time together. The second Tết holiday was last year in Hà Nội.

It was also very beautiful and colourful, people were walking around Hoàn Kiếm Lake and there were many festive occasions in different parts of Hà Nội. However, the festive occasions were abrupted very quickly due to COVID-19.

Sonya in Hàng Lược Flower Market. Courtesy Photo of the singer

So the end of Tết was very quiet.

This year is my third Tết in Việt Nam and we’ll celebrate it in Hà Nội.

Before I thought this year’s Tết will be very loud and full of people, but because of the new COVID-19 wave it seems like this year’s Tết will be a quiet Tết .

However I still see many people preparing for Tết as usual, cleaning their houses, buying Tết special goods and food, so hopefully, everyone will still have a very wonderful time during this Tết and have a warm and happy time at home with their families.

For me, Tết has become a very special occasion. I feel it is like a celebration of spring coming, blooming of the flowers and new intentions/dreams. I even recorded a Tết song Như Hoa Mùa Xuân to be part of this beautiful festival.

This year I had a chance to try bánh chưng , as well as mứt and ô mai for the first time. I will also cook bánh c hưng with my Vietnamese friend and her family. Now I live in the same house with a Vietnamese family, so maybe I can celebrate Tết with them and sing beautiful Vietnamese and Russian songs together.

If I have a chance I might go and buy some special beautiful áo dài dress, to feel like I’m part of this amazing celebration even more.

Lee Banghyun, Korean, strategy planning manager of Everon

I’m planning to spend more time with close friends and family. Initially, I had plans to travel outside of Hà Nội but under current circumstances, it’s better to stay within Hà Nội and maybe go on nearby trips with my friends.

As a resident of Hà Nội, I’m familiar with Tết gifts that Vietnamese exchange with one another. But without being invited to family houses it would be difficult to actually experience the authentic Vietnamese Tết culture, so I haven’t experienced it so far.

Exchanging gifts between friends for Tết is definitely different from Korea and I really like this local culture. Koreans are now busy making overseas travel plans over Lunar New Year so taking time and effort to relate to others during Tết in Viet Nam makes the holiday more special.

For the new year, I wish a cleaner Hà Nội to everyone. I think one benefit of COVID-19 is that it reduced the pollution level of the city and made a huge difference to the quality of living. I hope this year Hà Nội and all Vietnamese cities can keep cleaner air, water, etc… without the help of COVID-19, to benefit all its residents, including me.

Lee Banghyun (second from left) and his family gathering over Tết in Việt Nam in the past. Photo courtesy of Lee Banghyun

Vanessa Muhlheim, French, news copyeditor and presenter

I’ve been living in Việt Nam for more than 10 years so I know Tết .

For me Tết is a little bit like Christmas holidays, it’s a time for family members to gather and spend some time together, to break bread and share a big meal.

For my first Tết , I remember going to the flower market in Nhật Tân and being completely mesmerised by the landscape. It was truly breathtaking.

I usually spend Tết at my husband’s place and we always have amazing food, the mâm cỗ is usually insanely big and I got to try so many different dishes that you usually don’t get to taste during the year.

Vanessa Muhlheim in her beloved áo dài. Photo courtesy of Vanessa

I also particularly enjoy seeing all the women wearing áo dài for the occasion, it’s such a beautiful garment.

One of the things however that I dislike about the Tết holidays is that everything just kind of freezes. Almost all the shops, cafés and restaurants close down. And the weather is usually rainy and cold, it’s a bit depressing.

Last year because of COVID-19, Tết lasted a very long time, almost six months!

Jokes aside but this year our family is thinking about maybe going to the beach, Hội An or Phú Quốc for a change. France is more for our Christmas holidays or for summer vacations.

During Tết I usually help my mother in law with shopping and cooking. I also want my children to understand the tradition so that they both grow up knowing about both Vietnamese and French culture.

On the first day of the new year, we traditionally go back to my husband’s countryside and meet up with the big family. Everybody wears áo dài , me and my daughter as well, and the kids get to have lucky money. It’s a lot of fun. It’s the highlight of our Tết holidays really.

Holly Coles, Australian, self-employed movement educator

This will be my first Tết here.

While people tend to overindulge in feasts over the New Year, I am going in the opposite direction, with a plan to do a seven to 10 day pure fast that consists of only water. Partly because it’s a good time of the year when gyms are closed and the weather isn’t good for outdoor exercise, it’s an appropriate time for laying low and fasting and also it’s a good emotional and mental cleanse.

Having lived in China for more than five years, it’s not my first time experiencing Lunar New Year, however, I prefer staying in rather than travelling because I love how the city becomes blissfully quiet.

Holly posing against a background set up with distinct Tết elements at a yoga studio. Photo courtesy of Holly Coles

As a business owner I usually worked through the holidays – it was a good time to catch up without any distractions.

I’m not a fan of overconsumption so I forgo big celebrations. People consume more of the planet than necessary, resulting in too much waste with plastic packaging. It lasts two seconds for pleasure and unfortunately a lifetime as landfill. With my strong guidelines on health and minimalism, my wishes to anyone and everyone with celebrations is to be more conscious, maybe even shifting to celebrating in ways like donating time or money to charitable causes, or just enjoying time with family without the hyper-consumption.

Cory Michaud, American, owner of Zenith Restaurant

As Tết approaches it’s hard not to sense a certain feeling of excitement in the air. Local people seem to be cheerful about the possibilities of the new year around the corner and the opportunity to break away from everyday life and travel home for the special holiday.

This Tết I will be working in the cafe, hoping to feed the folks who aren’t able to travel home or go on holiday due to the COVID-19 resurgence.

Cory Michaud will work in his cafe thís Tết. Photo courtesy of Cory Michaud

This year will be my first experience of Tết in Việt Nam. Last year I was in Thailand, Chiang Mai. The city was lively and full of visitors from around Asia.

I’m looking forward to experiencing Tết the Vietnamese way. I have a few friends who have invited me to their home to share a family dinner with them during Tết . It will be nice to learn about the local traditions and taste all the interesting (and delicious) delicacies made specifically for the holidays.

I think my wish for this new year is for 2021 to be full of healing. Hopefully by the end of this year, globally we can get back to some sense of “normal”, so this time next year we can all travel worry-free and spend time with our families. VNS

Filed Under: Uncategorized expat, lifestyle, culture, Vietnam News, Politics, Business, Economy, Society, Life, Sports, Environment, Your Say, English Through the News, Magazine, vietnam...

Man ‘rises from dead’ with speech impairment and vision loss healed

December 2, 2021 by vietnamnet.vn

Mr. Nguyen Van Be, 71, in the Mekong Delta City of Can Tho, after a clinical death, oddly recovered from being sightless and voiceless. He is now voluble and a ball of fire as if he had never put up with impairments.

Người đàn ông ở Cần Thơ 'chết đi sống lại' bỗng hết câm, mù

Mr. Be speaks about sudden inexplicable illness of over 40 years.

He was born into poverty, which gave rise to the need to follow his father to laboriously work for a living since he was little. He started his own family at the age of 26, and the tough life never left him.

On an afternoon in 1977, while working with others, Mr. Be, a heathy 27-year-old breadwinner, all of a sudden felt malaise and shakiness, and collapsed on the ground and fainted. He then was hospitalized and was unconscious for three days. Waking up surrounded by people, he was powerless to verbally respond to the attention given to him. He realized he had lost the ability to even utter a word, despite the longing to talk. He grabbed a piece of paper and wrote “want to chat but unable to produce speech”. He had turned mute.

One month of treatment in a Can Tho hospital did not identify the causes of his inability to speak. He still could hear and had normal health. Clinics in the newly liberated time when facilities weren’t at their best, and were unable to offer him extensive analysis as wished. His family had to earn living by making baskets to sell at the market. His three children were also needy and couldn’t provide him with much financial support for a medical cure.

During 20 years of nonverbal communication, Mr. Be remained optimistic, thankful at least for being literate and having hearing. He tried to lead a normal life with no consideration of himself as disadvantaged.

“I gradually got accustomed to the sound of his clap every time he wanted to talk. After one short run when I got to him, he would start writing things down on a paper,” recalls Mai Thi De, 71, Mr. Be’s wife.

The worst was yet to come. On an October morning in 1997, during a coffee chat with friends, Mr. Be felt fatigued and ache in his shoulders, which caused him to go home quickly for a coin rubbing, but it didn’t help. After the therapy, he found himself losing his eyesight since the surroundings turned blurry, and he then collapsed into complete darkness. The doctors once again failed to help figure things out.

“It was absolutely unfair to me. Being mute and blind made me sick to my stomach. Hardly ever does anyone have the feeling of missing your loved one who is present in front of you. My mind ached to feel their touch, to hear their voice and their thoughts, to have a conversation.”

Người đàn ông ở Cần Thơ 'chết đi sống lại' bỗng hết câm, mù

With massive support from family, Mr. Be has had a helping hand for the last 18 years.

Requests in the house got partially exchanged for debts along with treatment fees. No longer fearing death, he wanted to end his life. After he turned sightless, Mr. Be lost his hope in life. He had four walls that he locked himself behind. In case of suicidal thoughts, his family had to stash away all the cutlery and poison, including pesticides and kerosene.

On an August evening in 2001, four years since his blindness, Mr. Be, returning home from a shrine for full moon offerings, suddenly suffered a blackout. His house swiftly filled with a crowd.

Embracing her husband, Mrs. De shed tears with the demand to get him hospitalized, but failed due to everyone’s assumption that he was gone. While the family proceeded with funeral planning, Be softly returned with flickering breath, leaving all petrified.

“I woke up watching my close ones sobbing, wondering what people were doing at my house, and spoke my mind,” he said.

Everyone was amazed that he regained his ability to see and uttered each person’s name after years of being blind and voiceless.

Rising from the dead with his speech impairment and vision loss healed, Mr. Be was euphoric to fulfil his promise to be philanthropic after he was cured. That was what he had recited in his mind during the long days of darkness.

None of Mr. Be’s acquaintances in Long Chau, Tan Loc ward, Thot Not district, Can Tho could envision a picture in which he was no longer impaired.

He joined a traditional medicine station in Thoi Thuan ward, Thot Not district, and was then sent to attend Traditional Medicine Intermediate School in Can Tho. After the course completion, he received a Diploma in Eastern Medicine and thorough knowledge of every medicinal plant in his garden. He could give medicine to people at the local Oriental Medicine Association. In addition to medicating people, he also participates in building houses, roads and bridges in the locality.

Người đàn ông ở Cần Thơ 'chết đi sống lại' bỗng hết câm, mù

Mr. Be (left) and Mr. Nguyen Van Muoi (63) work as volunteers for a water cooking session for people with leaky heart valve in Thoi Thuan ward, Thot Not district.

Doing good is how Mr. Be kept his promise to himself when he could not speak. “I prayed to heaven for my dysarthria and blindness to be cured, I vowed to spend my lifetime doing charity to return that favor, ” Mr. Be said.

Once every few months, he and his team take trips to Phu Quoc, Tay Ninh or Binh Thuan into the forest in search of herbal medicine to gift to traditional medicine clinics. His charity team of six is collecting money to rent five land plots with the price of 5 million VND per year to grow white lotus. White lotus, after being cooked, can help cure heart valve leakage and ischemic disease.

Doctor of CKI Traditional Medicine Nguyen Huu Truong (HCM City) said of Be’s clinical death: “Mr. Be may have not been breathing for the first few minutes. Since there was no revival after 20 minutes of oxygen deprivation, his family without rechecking thought he was dead. As for his instant eyesight and speech recovery after the clinical death, science is the only key.”

Mr. Be at lunchtime bought himself some minutes to have a good look at the lotus pond. Briefly grabbing the key, he then drove away in his dear old car. His easy figure was fluttering under the gleam of sunshine. The license plate, loosened from its screws, clattered on the bumpy river road…

Thanh Nghi

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