H’mong youth club acts to preserve and promote their indigenous culture
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AHD club members dressed in traditional H’mong costumes to deliver an art performance at the 2018 annual programme in Hanoi to reproduce the lunar New Year celebrations of H’Mong people (Photo: AHD). |
Through the AHD’s official Facebook
The
Recalling the first days of the establishment of AHD, Khang A Tua, the group’s head, said that the club initially had 12 members, who were born in the northern provinces of Yen Bai, Lao Cai
They first met while participating in a six-month project launched in 2015 by the Institute for Studies of Society, Economics and Environment (iSEE) as volunteers.
Tua, born in Mu Cang Chai district in Yen Bai province, said that by working together, the 12 H’mong youths recognized a need to create a space to practice their mother language and culture. As a result, AHD was founded in August 2015, and its Facebook page debuted two months later.
Throughout its operation, the club’s members have held that the H’mong ethnic culture faces the risk of being lost, as more and more H’
With their determination and vitality, AHD has made practical actions to search for, protect and uphold the H’mong culture, by hosting a series of talk shows to shed light on the life and customs of the H’mong people.
Prominent among the activities is the annual programme held in Hanoi to reproduce the traditional lunar New Year celebrations of the H’Mong people, which has attracted thousands of visitors in each edition.
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Khang A Tua, head of AHD club (first from left) at an event to introduce a collection of H’Mong folk stories (Photo: AHD). |
Most recently, AHD debuted a collection of H’Mong folk stories with illustrations by painter Nguyen The Linh. The collection groups stories in three major topics: Nature and Humans, the History of H’Mong people, and the Cultural Practices of H’mong people.
The publication is the fruit of one year of hard work by the club’s members after their field trips to H’mong villages across the northern provinces to meet and listen to the old memories of the village’s elders.
The club’s activities have also helped its members to enrich their knowledge on their ethnic group. Thanks to their efforts, a space gathering those who are interested in the H’Mong ethnic culture has been established to nurture and hand down the cultural values of the H’Mong people in modern life.
Source: NDO
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