(VOVWORLD) - Vice President Dang Thi Ngoc Thinh beat the drum to start the annual Trung Sisters’ temple festival in Hanoi to commemorate the heroines of the first Vietnamese independence movement.
Vice President Dang Thi Ngoc Thinh offers incense to the Trung Sisters, February 10, 2019. (Photo: VNA) |
The Trung Sisters headed an uprising against the Chinese Han dynasty overlords and briefly established an autonomous state in Vietnam in the first century AD. Their determination and leadership are cited as testimony to the respected position and freedom of women in Vietnamese society, as compared with the male-dominated societies of China.
Pilgrims to the Perfume pagoda festival must go by boat to reach the main pagoda. (Photo: zing.vn) |
An estimated 50,000 pilgrims flocked to Huong or Perfume pagoda in Hanoi on Sunday, the first day of Vietnam’s longest festival. To reach the main pagoda, visitors must take a one-hour boat trip on the Yen stream.
“We have 4,000 boats and are committed to ensuring maximum transport safety. All food service providers have signed commitments on food safety,” said Nguyen Van Hoat, Chief administrator of My Duc district, which hosts the Perfume pagoda festival.
The entrance to the main pagoda on top of Huong Tich mountain. |
The Perfume pagoda is a vast and striking complex of pagodas and Buddhist shrines built into the karst cliffs of Huong Tich Mountain (Mountain of the Fragrant Traces). The 3-month long Perfume pagoda festival drew 1,5 million visitors last year.
The same day, the Soc temple festival took place in Hanoi to honor the mythical hero, god and saint, Thanh Giong, who is credited with defending the country from the Chinese invaders, and is worshipped as the patron god of the harvest, national peace and family prosperity.
The horse procession at the Soc temple festival. |
The festival re-enacted Saint Giong’s feats through the riding of a white horse into battle and the orchestration of an elaborate flag dance to symbolize the battle itself. The celebrations at Soc temple, where Saint Giong ascended to heaven, included the ritual of bathing his statue and a procession of bamboo flowers to the temple as offerings to the Saint.
The Thu Le wrestling festival is organized on the 6th day of a new lunar year. |
Sunday also witnessed a traditional wrestling competition in Thu Le village in the central province of Thua Thien-Hue. The annual festival was first held 200 years ago in order to select healthy men for the army of the Nguyen dynasty which reigned Vietnam from 1802 to 1945. The bout also aims to encourage physical training among local young men.
The northern province of Bac Giang on Sunday celebrated 592 years of the Xuong Giang victory against the Chinese Ming invaders. After a 6-month battle in 1427, Vietnamese troops under the leadership of General Tran Nguyen Han defeated the Ming aggressors at Xuong Giang citadel, contributing to ending the Ming dynasty’s 20-year rule in Vietnam.