Vietnam culture
overview
Vietnam has an age-old and special culture that
is closely attached to the history of the formation and development of the
nation.
Historians have shared a common view that
Vietnam has a fairly large cultural community that was formed around the first
half of the first millenium B.C. and flourished in the middle of this
millenium. That was Dong Son cultural community. This culture attained a degree
of development higher than that of others at that time in the region and had
its own characteristics but still bore the features of Southeast Asian culture
because of the common South Asian racial root (Southern Mongoloid) and the wet
rice culture. Different development routes of local cultures in various areas
(in the deltas of Red River, Ma River, Ca River and so on) joined together to
form the Dong Son culture. This was also the period of the very
"embryonic" state of Vietnam in the form of inter- and super-village
community, which came into being and existed in order to resist invaders and to
build and maintain dykes for rice cultivation. From this pattern of
"embryo" state, primitive tribes grew into nations.
The period of Van
Lang-Au Lac State: (lasting for nearly 3,000 years up to the end of the first
millenium before Christ) in the early Bronze Age with 18 Hung kings was
regarded as the first apogee in the history of the Vietnamese culture, which
was typified by the Dong Son bronze drum and stable technique of cultivating
wet rice.
The post-Chinese domination period was
characterized by the two parallel trends of Han assimilation and anti-Han
assimilation. The Dai Viet (Great Vietnam) period was the second apogee of the
Vietnamese culture. Throughout the time of independent feudal states,
milestoned by the Ly-Tran and Le dynasties, the Vietnamese culture underwent
comprehensive restoration and quick boom, under the tremendous influence of
Buddhism and Taoism.
After the chaotic Le-Mac and Trinh-Nguyenperiod,
when the country was separated, and since the Tay Son dynasty reunited the country
and territory, the Nguyen dynasty tried to restore Confucian culture. They,
however, failed because Confucianism had already been fading and the Western
culture started to penetrate into the country. The period up to the end of
French domination was marked by a cultural mix brought about by two opposite
trends - i.e. of Europeanization and anti-Europeanization; that presented the
fight between patriotic culture and colonialist culture.
The period of modern Vietnamese culture has
gradually taken shape since the 30’s and 40’s of last century under the banner
of patriotism and Marxism-Leninism. Vietnamese culture, with the increasingly
intensive integration into the world modern civilization and the preservation
and enhancement of the national identity, promises to reach a new historical
peak.
It can be said that there were three layers of
culture overlapping each other during the history of Vietnam: local culture,
the culture that mixed with those of China and other countries in the region,
and the culture that interacted with Western culture. The most prominent
feature of the Vietnamese culture is that it was not assimilated by foreign
cultures thanks to the strong local cultural foundations. On the contrary, it
was able to utilize and localize those from abroad to enrich the national
culture.
The Vietnamese national culture emerged from a
specific living environment: a tropical country with many rivers and the
confluence of great cultures. The natural conditions (temperature, humidity,
monsoon, water-flows, wet-rice agriculture) exert a remarkable impact on the
material and spiritual life of the nation, the characteristics and psychology
of the Vietnamese. However, social and historical conditions exert an extremely
great influence on culture and national psychology. Thus, there are still
cultural differences between Vietnam and other wet-rice cultures like Thailand,
Laos, Indonesia, India and others. Though sharing the same Southeast Asian
cultural origin, the Vietnamese culture was transformed and bore East Asian
cultural characteristics because of the long Chinese domination and its
cultural imposition on Vietnam.
The Vietnamese nation was formed early in the
history and often had to carry out wars of resistance against foreign invaders,
which created a prominent cultural feature: a patriotism that infiltrated and
encompassed every aspect of life. Community factors with primitive origin were
amalgamated early in the history and became the foundations for the development
of patriotism and national consciousness. Continual wars were the major cause
of the vicissitudes of the Vietnamese social development history. All the
social and economic structures were often dismantled by wars, so the social
development could hardly reach its peak. Also because of the destruction of
wars, Vietnam has virtually no gigantic cultural and artistic construction, or
if any, they could not have been preserved intact.
Vietnam has 54 ethnic groups living across the
country. Each ethnic group has its own cultural identities, thus, the
Vietnamese culture has both diversity and unity. Apart from the typical
Viet-Muong culture, there are other cultural groups like Tay-Nung, Thai, Cham,
Hoa-Ngai, Mon-Khmer, Mong-Dao, and especially the groups in the Central
Highlands that still maintain fairly diverse and comprehensive traditions of a
purely agricultural society that is closely attached to forests and mountains.
The following is an overview on main culture
fields:
1. Philosophy and
ideologies
At the start, with primitive and rudimentary cognition
of materialism and dialectics, Vietnamese thought was mixed with beliefs.
However, originating from agricultural culture that differs from nomadic
culture by the appreciation of stillness over movement and closely related to
natural phenomena, the Vietnamese philosophy paid special attention to
relations that was typified by doctrine of yin and yang and the five basic
elements (not exactly the same as the Chinese doctrine) and manifested by the
moderate lifestyle tending towards harmony.
Afterwards, the influence of Buddhism,
Confucianism and Taoism, that were conciliated and Vietnamized, contributed to
the development of the Vietnamese society and culture. Particularly,
Zen-Buddhists in the Tran dynasty came up with the interpretation of most philosophical
subjects that was set forth by Buddhism (Heart-Buddha, being or not being, life
and death) in an original and distinguished way. Although Confucianism
flourished afterward, many famous Vietnamese Confucian scholars did not stick
blindly to Confucianism and Mencianism, but rather adopted the spirit of
Buddhism and Taoism to make their ideology more open, closer to the people and
more harmonious with nature.
Under autocratic dynasties, deep feudal
ideologies were imposed on farmers and bound women, however, village democracy
and primitive community still existed on the basis of self-supplied
agriculture. Farmers’ thoughts that penetrated deeply into the Vietnamese
agricultural society had many positive and typical features of the traditional
Vietnamese. Farmers were the core of wars of resistance and uprisings against
foreign invaders. Many talented generals, topped by Quang Trung Nguyen Hue -
the hero of the common people in the 18th century, came from farmers.
The policy that facilitated agriculture and
restrained trade, prevailing in the Nguyen dynasty, blocked the development of
city-dweller's consciousness. In the past, the Vietnamese ranked agriculture
and education as their first and second priorities of occupations, while having
a low opinion of business people. Other trades were regarded as minor ones,
including cultural activities.
In the 19th century when Vietnamese feudalism
faded and Chinese civilization declined, Western culture started to penetrate
our countries, following the colonialists’ guns. The working class formed at
the start of the 20th century as a result of the colonial exploitation
programs. Marxism-Leninism was introduced in Vietnam in the '20s and '30s,
combining with patriotism to become a momentum of historical changes, which led
the country up to independence, democracy and socialism. The person
representing this era was Ho Chi Minh, who was recognized by the international
community and UNESCO as Vietnamese hero of national liberation and great man of
culture.
The agricultural society is characterized by the
village community with many prolonged primitive vestiges that have formed the
specific characteristics of the Vietnamese. Those were the thoughts of dualism,
a concrete way of thinking that was tilted to emotional experiences rather than
rationalism and preferred images to concepts. However, it was also a flexible,
adaptable, and conciliatory way of thinking. This was a way of living that
highly valued emotional ties and attachment to relatives and the community
(because "there would be no home in a lost country" and "the
whole village rather than a sole roof would be engulfed by flood"). This
was a way of behaving toward conciliatory, equilibrium and relations-based
settlement of conflicts and disputes. This way of living could cope accordingly
with the situation, which many times in the history was successful in using
suppleness to prevail over firmness and weakness to resist strength.
On the scale of spiritual values, the Vietnamese
highly appreciate "Benevolence" and closely combined it with
"Righteousness" and "Virtues"; no benevolence and
righteousness are tantamount to no virtues. Nguyen Trai once described the
Vietnamese concept of Benevolence and Righteousness as the opposition to fierce
violence, which was enhanced to the foundation for the policy of ruling as well
as saving the country. The Vietnamese understood that Loyalty meant being loyal
to the nation, which was higher than the loyalty to the ruler, and respected
Piety without being so bound with the framework of family. Happiness was also
among the top social values; people often make compliments on the happiness of
a family rather than wealth and social position.
2. Customs and
practices
The Vietnamese gastronomic habit tends towards
vegetarianism; rice and vegetables are the main course of the meal that may be
diversified by aqua products. Boiling is a special way of cooking of the
Vietnamese people. Vietnamese people like a synthetic food processing style
that involves many materials and ingredients. Today, although meat and fish are
the main dishes of the meal, the Vietnamese do not forget pickled egg-plant.
The Vietnamese preferred to wear light, thin,
well-ventilated kind of clothing that originated from plants and was suitable
for such a tropical country as Vietnam, with grey, indigo and black colours.
Men’s clothing changed from loin-cloth with bare upper part of the body to
short jackets and Vietnamese traditional trousers (re-designed from Chinese
trousers). In the past, women often wore brassieres, skirts and four-piece long
dresses that were later modified to the modern ao
dai. In general, Vietnamese
women adorned themselves subtly and secretively in a society where "virtue
is more important than appearance". Old-time clothing also paid attention
to kerchiefs, hats and belts.
The old-style Vietnamese house was related to
the watery environment (stilt-houses with curved roof). Then came thatch-roofed
houses with clay walls, which were built mostly from wood and bamboo. This kind
of house did not stand too high to avoid strong winds and storms, and more
importantly, the house should face to the South direction to be free from hot
and cold weathers. The interior of the house was also not so spacious to leave
room for the courtyard, pond, and garden. Also, the Vietnamese thought that
"spacious home was no better than sufficient food". Sizeable ancient
architectures were often built shrouded and in harmony with natural
environment.
The traditional means of transport is waterways.
Ship of all types together with the river and the wharf, are familiar in the
Vietnamese geological and humanitarian images.
Vietnamese customs of weddings, funerals,
holidays and rituals all are attached to village community. Marriages not only
reflecte the lovers’ desire but also had to meet the interests of the family
lines, the village; thus, the choice for would-be bride or bridegroom was done
very carefully, which had to go through many formalities from the plighting
ceremony, the official proposal to the bride’s family, the wedding to the
marriage tie, the ritual of sharing bridal cup of wine, the newly-weds’ first
visit to the bride’s family. Besides, the bride had to pay a fine in order for
her to be accepted as a new member of the village. Funeral service is also
proceeded very thoroughly to express the grief and see off the deseased into
the other world. The family of the deceased does not have to take care of the
service by themselves, they are also helped by the neighbors.
Vietnam is the country of festivities which take
place all year round, especially in spring when there is little farming work.
The major festivities are Lunar New Year, Nguyen
tieu (15th
day of the first lunar month), Han thuc (3rd day of the third
lunar month), Doan ngo (5th day of the fifth lunar month), the Day for Wandering
Souls (15th day of the seventh lunar month), and Mid-Autumn Festival. Each
region has its own ritual holidays, the most important of which are
agricultural rituals (such as the rituals of praying for rain, getting down to
the rice field, and new harvest) and handicraft rituals (like the rituals of
copper casting, forging, making fire crackers, and boat race). Besides, there
are also rituals dedicated to national heroes and religious and cultural
services (e.g, Buddhist rituals). Ritual holidays are usually divided into two
parts: the service is carried out for blesses and thanksgivings, the holiday is
the cultural activities of the community consisting of many folk games and
contests.
3. Religions and Beliefs
The Vietnamese folk beliefs since the ancient
time consist of belief in fertility, worship of nature and worship of man.
Human beings need to be reproduced, crops need to be lushly green for the
nourishment and development of life, so belief in fertility came into
existence.
In Vietnam, this long-standing belief was
displayed in the cult of linga and yoni (in India, only linga was worshipped)
and the act of sexual intercouse (this is an unpopular practice in Southeast
Asia). Many traces of this practice can be found on many stone statues and
columns, decorative motifs in the Central Highlands tomb-houses, some customs
and dances, especially in the shape and motifs of ancient bronze drums.
Wet-rice agriculture that depended much on
natural factors ignited the belief of worshipping nature. In Vietnam, this
belief was polytheism and respect for goddess, and worship of animals and
plants as well. A research book published in 1984 listed 75 goddesses or Holy
Mothers, mostly matriarchal goddesses, also called Mau (ancient people not only
worshipped the Creator but also Mau Cuu Trung which was a female
Creator, as well as Goddes of Forest, River Goddess and so on). Regarding
botany-worshipping belief, the rice plant was most venerated, the next were the
banyan-tree, the areca-tree, the mulberry tree and the gourd. In respect of
animal-worshipping beliefs, unlike nomadic culture that worships fierce wild
animals, the Vietnamese tend to worship gentle species of animals like stags,
deer, frogs, especially those which are easy to come by in the riverside
regions like water-birds, snakes, and crocodiles. The Vietnamese proclaimed
themselves as belonging to the Hong Bang family line and the Tien Rong breed
(Hong Bang is the name of a huge species of water-bird; Tien, or Fairy, is deification of an
egg-laying species of bird; Rong, or Dragon, is an
abstract image of snake and crocodile). The ascending dragon that was born in
the water is meaningful and special symbol of the Vietnamese nation.
Among the human-revering beliefs, the custom of
ancestral worship is the most popular, which nearly become one belief of the
Vietnamese (also called Dao Ong Ba in South Vietnam).
The Vietnamese choose the death-day rather than the birthday to hold a
commemorative anniversary for the deceased. Every family worships Tho
cong, or the God of Home,
who takes care of the home and blesses the family. Every village worships
its Thanh hoang, the tutelary god, who protects and guides the whole village (the
Vietnamese always honour the people who rendered distinguished services for
villagers or national heroes who were born or died in the village to be
their Thanh hoang). The whole nation worships the very first kings, sharing the
common ancestors' death anniversary (the Festival of Hung Kings Temple).
Particularly, the worship of Tu Bat Tu, or the Four
Immortal Gods, namely, Tan Vien (preventing flooding), Saint Giong (resisting
and defeating foreign invaders), Chu Dong Tu (together with his wife growing
out of poverty to consistently build his fortune) and Lieu Hanh (heavenly princess
who left Heaven for the earth in the yearning for happiness) has been regarded
as extremely beautiful national values.
Although turning into superstition in some
specific cases, folk beliefs have lasted consistently and mixed with orthodox
religions.
Therevada Buddhism might have been imported
directly into Vietnam from India through sea routes since the 2nd century A.D.
Vietnamese Buddhism stays on earth rather than ascends up to heaven, attaches
to exorcism and prayers for wealth, happiness and longevity rather than heading
toward nirvana. Only when Maharayana Buddhism approached the country from China
did Vietnamese monks have the chance to carry out in-depth study of Buddhism;
however, separate sects were later formed, such as Truc Lam Buddhist Sect which
attaches importance to the Buddha inside the human heart. In the Ly-Tran
dynasties, Buddhism, though having reached its peak, still embraced both Taoism
and Confucianism to create a cultural face with "the three religions
existing at the same time". Over ups and downs throughout the history,
Buddhism has become absolutely familiar to the Vietnamese; according to the
1993 stastistics, there were up to some 3 million Buddhist followers and some
other 10 millions frequently going to the pagoda for worshipping the Buddha.
Under the Chinese domination, Confucianism had
yet to gain a position in the Vietnamese society. The official adoption of
Confucianism had not been recorded until 1070 when King Ly Thanh Tong built Van
Mieu (Temple of Literature) to worship Zhou Gong and Confucius. In the 15th
century, due to the need of constructing a unified nation, a centralized
administration and a social order, Confucianism took the place of Buddhism to
become a national religion under the Le dynasty. Confucianism, mostly Song
Confucianism, that took root deep into the social and political structure, the
system of education and examinations and the circle of Confucian scholars
gradually dominated social and moral life. However, Confucianism was only
accepted to Vietnam in specific factors, particularly on politics and morality,
rather than its entire system.
Taoism penetrated Vietnam at roughly the end of
the 2nd century. Since the Vo Vi (letting things take their own course)
doctrine bore the thought of resisting the Chinese rulers, it was used as a
weapon against the Northern feudalism. This religion also contained factors of
magic and mystery, so it fits human subconscience and primitive beliefs. Many
Confucianists also admired Taoist tendency of enjoying quietness and joyful
leisure. However, Taoism has long been regarded as an extinct religion that
only left vestiges in folk beliefs.
Christianity came to Vietnam in the 16th century
as an intermediary of the Western culture and colonialism. It made use of the
favourable opportunity in which feudalism was in crisis, Buddhism was depraved
and Confucianism was in deadlock to become a spiritual relief of a part of the
population. However, this religion failed to integrate into the Vietnamese
culture for a long time. Christians had to set up an altar dedicated to Jesus
Christ right at their homes. Only when the Gospel was introduced into Vietnam,
Christianity was able to gain a position. In 1993, there were 5 million
Catholics and nearly half a million Protestants.
Foreign religions imported to Vietnam did not
exterminate the local folk beliefs, but they mixed with each other to derive
specific variants for both sides. For example, Taoism could not lower the
women’s role, which was reflected by widespread worship of Mau (Holy Mother).
The features of polytheism, democracy, and community are manifested by the
worship of groups of ancestors, and pairs of gods. Entering a pagoda, people
can easily recognize that not only Buddhas but also gods and even human are
worshiped there. Perhaps, only in Vietnam, there were legends that a toad dares
to sue Heaven or a human being marries a fairy. These are the prominent
features of Vietnamese beliefs.
4. Languages
There have been many theories regarding the
origin of the Vietnamese language. The most persuasive one argues that the
Vietnamese language previously belonged to the Mon-Khmer group of the Southeast
Asian linguistic system, it was later transformed into Viet-Muonglanguage (or
old Vietnamese language) and then separated to form the modern Vietnamese
language. In the present-day Vietnamese language, many words have been proved
to contain Mon-Khmerroots and to be phonetically and semantically relevant to
the Muong language.
Throughout a millennium of Chinese domination
and under the Vietnamese feudal dynasties, the official language was Chinese,
but the Vietnamese always demonstrated its strength for self-preservation and
development. The Chinese language was pronounced in the Vietnamese way, called
the Han-Viet way of pronunciation, and Vietnamized in various ways to create
many commonly used Vietnamese words. The diverse development of the Vietnamese
language brought about the birth of a system of writing scripts transcribing
the Vietnamese language on the basis of the Han script in the 13th century,
called the Nom script.
Under the French domination, Chinese script was
gradually eliminated and replaced by French that was used as the official
language in administrative, educational and diplomatic activities. Thanks to
the quoc ngu (Romanized) writing script that boasts the advantages of simple
figure, composition, spelling and pronunciation, the modern Vietnamese prose
was actually formed and then accepted positive influence from the Western
cultural language. The quoc ngu writing script was produced by some Western
missionaries including Alexandre de Rhodes; they cooperated with some
Vietnamese to transcribe the Vietnamese language on the basis of the Latin
alphabet for using in evangelism in the 17th century. The quoc
ngu writing
script was perfected and popularized to become a significant cultural tool. In
late 19th century, publications were published in the quoc
ngu script.
After the August 1945 Revolution, the Vietnamese
language and the quoc ngu script have seized a dominating position and
strongly developed and established itself as a multi-functional language that
has been used in every field, at every educational level and has reflected
every reality of life. Today, thanks to the Revolution, some ethnic minorities
have their own writing scripts.
The Vietnamese language is characterized by
mono-syllables, a concrete, abundant, acoustic and imaginary vocabulary and a
proportionate, rhythmical, lively, flexible, symbolic and emotional way of
expression, which tremendously facilitates artistic and literary creation. The
Vietnamese dictionary published by the Center of Lexicography in 1997 consists
of 38,410 entries.
5. Literature
Parallel and deeply interacting with other
cultural aspects, the Vietnamese literature came into being at an early date,
including two major components - folk literature and written literature. Folk
literature held a great significance in Vietnam and made immense contribution
to the preservation and development of the national language as well as
nourishing the people’s soul. Folk literary works were diversified by myths,
epics, legends, humorous stories, riddles, proverbs, folk-songs and so on, with
many identities of Vietnamese ethnic groups.
Written literature was born roughly in the 10th
century. Up to the 20th century, there had been two components existing at the
same time: works written in the Chinese script (with poems and prose
demonstrating the Vietnamese soul and realities; thus, they were still regarded
as Vietnamese literature) and works written in the Nom script (mostly
poems; many great works were handed down to the later generations). Since the
1920s, written literature has been mainly composed in the quoc
ngu script
with profound renovations in form and genre such as novels, new-style poems,
short stories and dramas, and with a diversity in artistic tendency. Written
literature attained speedy development after the August 1945 Revolution, when
it was directed by the Communist Party of Vietnam’s guideline and focused on
the people’s fighting and working life.
Admittedly, the whole Vietnamese nation likes
poetry and composing poems - ranging from kings, mandarins, generals to monks,
feudal scholars, and even revolutionaries. A farmer, an old boatman, a soldier
all know some six-eight-word meters or satirical verses.
Regarding the content, the mainstream was the
unyielding patriotic literature in every time and the anti-feudalist literature
that was often expressed through the plight of women. Another important theme
was the onslaughts against social vices. Great poets of the nation were all
great humanists.
Modern Vietnamese literature has developed from
romanticism to realism, from heroism in wartime to all aspects of life, and
scoured into ordinary life to find out genuine values of the Vietnamese people.
Classical literature generated such masterpieces
as Truyen Kieu (Nguyen Du), Cung oan ngam khuc (Nguyen Gia Thieu), Chinh
phu ngam (Dang Tran Con), Quoc am thi
tap (Nguyen
Trai). Vietnam had some brilliant female poets like Ho Xuan Huong, Doan Thi Diem,
and Ba Huyen Thanh Quan centuries ago.
In the Vietnamese modern prose, there were
authors who could emulate with whoever in the world, namely, Nguyen Cong Hoan,
Vu Trong Phung, Ngo Tat To, Nguyen Hong, Nguyen Tuan, and Nam Cao. They were
sided by excellent poets like Xuan Dieu, Huy Can, Han Mac Tu, Nguyen Binh.
Regrettably, great works that faithfully reflect the country and the times have
yet to appear.
6. Arts
Vietnam has got some 50 national musical
instruments. Among percussion instruments, the most popular, diverse and
long-lasting are trong dong (bronze drums), cong
chieng (gongs), dan
da (lithophone), dan
t’rung... The set of blowing instruments is represented by flutes and
pan-pipes, while the set of string instruments is specified by dan
bau (monochord)
and dan day.
The Vietnamese folksongs are rich in forms and
melodies of regions across the country, ranging from ngam
tho (reciting
poems), hat ru (lullaby), ho (chanty) to hat
quan ho, trong quan, xoan, dum, vi giam, ca Hue, bai choi, ly. Apart from this, there
are also other forms like hat xam,
chau van,
and ca tru.
Traditional performing arts include cheo and tuong. Water-puppet is also a
special traditional art that was ignited in the Ly dynasty. At the start of the
20th century, cai luong (renovated theatre) appeared in Cochinchina with melodies
of vong co.
The Vietnamese acoustic arts generally have
symbolic, expressive and emotional features. Traditional stage relates closely
to the audience and is a combination of music and dance forms. The Vietnamese
dance has few strong and tough actions, but contains many smooth and curling
features with closed feet and a lot of arm-dancing actions.
In Vietnam, the arts of sculpture on stone,
copper and terra-cotta came into existence very early, dating back to the
10,000 B.C. Later, enameled ceramics, wooden statues, shell-encrusted pictures,
lacquers, silk paintings and paper-made pictures all attained high degree of
artistic development. The Vietnamese plastic arts focus on expressing innermost
feelings with simplified forms using many methods of stylization and emphasis.
There have been 2,014 cultural and historical
sites have been recognized by the State and 5 sites, namely the Ancient Capital
of Hue and Ha Long Bay have gained international recognition as the world
heritage sites. The remaining ancient architectures are mostly pagodas and
temples of the Ly-Trandynasties, palaces and stelas of the Ledynasty, the 18th
century’s community houses, citadels and tombs of the Nguyen dynasty and Cham
towers.
In the 20th century, in contact with the Western
culture, especially after regaining the national independence, many new
categories of arts like dramatics, photography, cinema, and modern art had
taken shape and developed strongly, obtaining huge achievements with the
contents reflecting the social and revolutionary realities. Up to 1997, there
were 44 people operating in cultural and art fields honoured with the Ho Chi
Minh Prize, 130 others conferred with the honourable titles of People’s Artist,
and 1,011 with Eminent Artist. At the start of 1997, there were 191
professional artistic organizations and 26 film studios (including central and
local ones). There have been 28 movies, 49 scientific and documentary films
receiving international cinematic awards in many countries.
The traditional and national culture in the time
of industrialization and modernization is facing tough challenges posed by the
market economy as well as the tendency of globalization. Some cultural and
artistic branches have been seeking for renovation. The preservation and
development of the national culture, the selection of the traditional values
and the construction of the new ones have turned the most important than any
time in history. The traditional cultural values should be preserved but should
be also enriched by the advanced cultural values of the mandkind. Culture
should be modernized but should not be separated from the nation. The process
of cultural reform is still under way...
(Sources: https://www.asean2020.vn)