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Vietnam
Overview
Top
destinations - Festivals
- Culture - History
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Mention
the name Vietnam, and most people assume you mean the
war, thirty years since the end of the war, it is a
country at peace, with spectacular geography, a
vibrant culture, and genuinely friendly people. it is in
reality a country filled with captivating natural beauty
and tranquil village life. Its highlands and rainforest
regions, far from being devastated, continue to yield
new species and team with exotic wildlife. Its islands
and beaches are among the finest in all of Southeast
Asia, and its cuisine is very possibly the most
delicious you will ever find. |
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Verdant
patchworks of rice paddies, pointed lampshade-style hats, a
country ravaged by war, and economic repression - these are
the international images of Vietnam, seen on worldwide
television and read about in the newspapers. But there are
other scenes to be found, ones of natural beauty, ethnic
culture, and imperial history, of timeless traditional
villages, idyllic sea resorts and dynamic cities. The impact
of Japanese and Chinese trade, French occupation and American
intervention has left its stain on Vietnam, smeared over a
period of more than two thousand years of recorded history.
However, the country has also been left with a vivid legacy
from different cultures evident in the character of its towns,
as well as in the architecture and food. The quaint town of
Hoi An, once a major trading port, boasts the perfectly
preserved architectural influences of the Asian merchants from
the north, while the broad leafy boulevards of the capital
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City are reminiscent of France. Menus
offer Chinese variations of spring rolls, steamed dumplings
and noodles. Hue is the old imperial capital of Vietnam with
its royal palaces and palatial mausoleums, and nearby the
battle sites of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) are reminders of
the brutality of war. |
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Shaped
like an elongated ‘S’, Vietnam stretches along the
east coast of the Indochinese Peninsula and is likened
by its people to a long bamboo pole hung with two
baskets of rice, represented by the two fertile
regions at either end of the country. Between the lush
Red River Delta and the highlands in the north, known
for their magnificent scenery and colorful hill tribes,
and the agricultural plains and floating markets of the
Mekong Delta in the south, lie miles of white sandy
beaches, towering mountains, rivers and dense forests,
and the thousands of bizarre rock and cave formations on
the islands of Halong Bay. |
Ancient
temples and colorful pagodas are scattered throughout the
urban centres, while among them stand hotels of modern luxury,
and the development of tourism infrastructure is a booming
business. Vietnam is a perfect balance between ancient times
and the here and now, a country that reveres its past heroes,
a nation that has collectively put the woes of war behind it,
and people who welcome visitors to their country with open
arms and friendly smiles. |
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