At a review conference of the work held on February 21, Ngo Thanh Son, Vice President of the municipal Vietnam Fatherland Front Committee, said last year, the initiative connected 95 Vietnamese families with 127 Lao and 35 Cambodian students studying in the city, offering them valuable cultural and emotional support.

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Lao and Cambodian students with their Vietnamese families at the event  (Photo: plo.vn)

As part of the program, the city facilitated exchange visits, including a trip to Cambodia, where adoptive families had the opportunity to meet the students' families, providing reassurance to parents about their children's well-being. The authorities also allocated over 748 million VND (29,304 USD) to support host families. Other notable activities included a welcome ceremony for the foreign students to meet their adoptive families, a Vietnam-Laos-Cambodia family day, and immersive cultural experiences such as a one-day-as-a-farmer event in Can Gio district.

These activities provide Lao and Cambodian students with opportunities to experience Vietnamese culture firsthand, fostering deeper bonds with their host families and strengthening the spirit of solidarity among the three nations, Son noted.

Sengchanthavong Khemphone, a Lao student at Pham Ngoc Thach University of Medicine, expressed deep gratitude for the program, calling the experience “unforgettable.” The student said it has given Lao and Cambodian students a second home while studying far from their own. It not only provides emotional support but also deepens their understanding of Vietnam’s people, culture, and land.

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At the meeting (Photo: plo.vn)

Khemphone said the group is committed to excelling in their studies so that they can contribute to their homelands and further strengthen the friendship between Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

Source: VNA