Visit Thu Cuc Village to get in touch with nature
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Sacred space: A temple built to worship Thu Cuc, a Muong girl who brought new rice to her village. |
He can’t help but praise the stunning scenery every time we meet. Last week he invited my family to visit his hometown. I jumped at the chance to breathe some fresh air and set off to the countryside.
Just 130 kilometres from Ha Noi, the hamlets of Soi and U appear among the green fields, their distinctive palm-leaf roofs are particular to the Muong ethnic group. The landscape opened up in front of my eyes, with fresh fields stretching to the Bua River and hundred-year-old trees standing
When we arrived at the hamlet of U,
“The Muong ethnic group earn a living from wet rice, so the dam plays an important role in bringing water
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Cooling off: U Dam is made out of wood and attracts many visitors. — Photo: Vinh Ha/VNS. |
My two sons raced out of the car and towards the dam, intending to wade across the dam, but
In the afternoon,
Soon it was time for lunch, and aunt Ngo invited us to enjoy some of her food. The spread of traditional foods was delicious, and even with a little appetite I enjoyed tasting the fermented cassava leaves, steamed snails gathered from the stream, and grilled goby marinated in spices.
Even my sons, usually wary of strange foods, enjoyed the dishes here, saying they particularly liked the steamed snails which were crispy, tasty and very fresh.
Ngo said these foods are
After the meal, Ngo led us to Cuc Temple to worship the Muong girl name Cuc.
Legend has it that a group of Muong people from Hoa Binh Province, travelling to find a place to live, discovered Thu Cuc, a fertile piece of land. They decided to stop and settle right here.
However, several years later, the villagers found themselves struggling with prolonged drought. “No trees or livestock could be raised and the people suffered,” Ngo told us.
At that time, there had a beautiful and intelligent girl named Cuc. She had a lot of farming experience and was ready to help others. Seeing her neighbours suffering from hunger and poverty, Cuc wandered up hills and down the valleys to find a rice seed to rescue her fellow villagers.
She managed to overcome many dangerous situations, such as crossing deep streams and thick jungles, but when she found the rice seeds and started making her way home she was killed by a wild animal, leaving the rice seeds which her villagers later brought home to grow in their field.
Thanks to Cuc, local people’s living standards started to improve day by day.
Villagers built a temple in the area where she died, in order to remember her sacrifice and worship her.
Every year on the seventh and eighth days of the first Lunar month, Thu Cuc villagers begin a festival to welcome the soul of the rice to the village, wishing for good health and bumper crops all year round. They bring new rice and
Sorcerer Hoang Van Ta said the people who join the festival and the welcoming of the rice’s soul should be supported by Cuc. “They will have full baskets of rice and maize for themselves and their livestock breeding too.”
“I myself regularly join the traditional sacred festival. Ta is right, now no one in my village faces hunger or poverty,” said Ha Manh Hung, deputy chairman of Thu Cuc Commune’s People’s Committee.
Source: VNS.
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