September 30, 2021 | 19:57 (GMT+7)
Vietnamese festival takes place in British town
An event titled “Meet Vietnam in Newhaven” was co-hosted by the Vietnamese Embassy in the U.K. and the government of Newhaven, a small port town about 100km south of London, on September 28 (local time).
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Vietnamese Ambassador Nguyen Hoang Long speaks at the event. |
The event provided local residents a chance to learn about Vietnam’s history, culture and people through an exhibition of photos on the country’s UNESCO-recognized tangible and intangible cultural heritage elements and its traditional food.
In her remarks, Newhaven Mayor Lesly Boniface expressed her pride in the historic link between her town and late President Ho Chi Minh, who worked as a chef on a ferry connecting Newhaven and the French town of Dieppe after World War I.
The British mayor highly spoke of Ho Chi Minh’s patriotism, courage and wisdom that helped him find the way to liberate his people and country. The historic link will lay a strong basis for the relations between Newhaven and Vietnam to grow further in the future, she said.
She also took the occasion to thank Vietnam for donating face masks to Newhaven when the COVID-19 broke out in the U.K. last year.
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Participants of the event |
Vietnamese Ambassador Nguyen Hoang Long, for his part, thanked the local government for supporting and coordinating with the Vietnamese Embassy in organizing the event, saying the Vietnam - U.K. Strategic Partnership is flourishing thanks to relentless efforts of both sides over the past five decades with the government and people of Newhaven playing a significant part in these drives.
He recalled the time President Ho Chi Minh lived and worked in London from 1913-1917 and on the Newhaven-Dieppe ferry, which became a foundation for the relations between Vietnam and Newhaven, and the U.K. at large. It was in the U.K. that the Vietnamese leader first read the works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels which became his source of inspiration for his revolutionary path.
In 2013, a stele was erected at the mouth of the Ouse river to mark the 100th anniversary of Ho Chi Minh’s arrival in the U.K. and the 40th anniversary of the two countries’ diplomatic ties (1973-2013).
Source: VNA