Cultural
Merging In Saigon-HCM City
Over hundreds of years, with the vicissitude of history, the world’s various cultures seemed to have found a common place to converge in Saigon-HCM City. The city has been gradually turned into a non-discriminating community, a cultural kaleidoscope, for people from almost every corner of the world, regardless of race and ideology.
Atheism and theism were all absorbed, blended and “Saigonized” into the Vietnamese cultural background – the revolutionary refinement. All the cultural flows converged and supplemented each other to produce a unique “common home” with a wide-ranging characteristic e.g. Vietnamese-Chinese-English-Indian-Russian-Korean-American-French-Japanese, and more.
Saigon,
depending on individual appraisal, is sometimes called “Saigon Potpourri”,
“Multi-faced Saigon”, and “Amalgamated Saigon,” all to describe the
uniqueness of this lively and colorful city.
In 1698, Lord Nguyen Phuc Chu
sent Garrison-General Nguyen Huu Canh on an inspection and conquest
expedition to the Saigon region. This was a strategic step of the Nguyen
dynasty, aiming to expand the court’s influence southward with gradual
colonization. The coastal culture of the central region Vietnamese came with
the expedition southward, then took root in the Saigon areas. The coastal
ways of life had, for centuries, tempered these Vietnamese into hardened but
flexible pioneer-soldiers, people who had to struggle to make a living in
the narrowest and most arid part of Vietnam. These early soldier-pioneers
were adventurous, hard-working, and brave, had good adaptability and above
all, were dreamers of a better life, all the merits needed for the hardship
of colonization. Long-standing skills were brought to the new land as well,
the most notable being wood and stone carving, the fame of which had been
manifested in the building of fortresses and royals’ palaces in Hue
Citadel under the Nguyen dynasty. Local food specialties were brought along
with the expedition and stayed throughout the centuries. Quang noodle
(prepared with rice flour noodles), Hue beef-soup vermicelli (hot and
spicy), and Hue tre (pork skin and galingale wrapped in leaves and paddy
straw) can still be found in Saigon. In general, Vietnam’s central region
culture was part of Saigon’s tradition right from the dawn of the
community.
A little later in the same
period, Chinese culture started to arrive with defeated Ming troopers and
court dissidents who failed in their uprising against the ruling Manchurian.
In this new refuge, those uprooted Chinese, like working bees with their
ancient cultural nectar, started to establish their own settlement quarters
which then developed into Cholon, Saigon’s Chinatown. One particular trait
of Chinese communities all over the world, Saigon’s Chinatown is no
exception: commercial activities, importing and exporting and light industry
always rank first of all professions. From the early days in Saigon, the
Chinese were quick to figure out the principles of the “market economy”
and therefore took to the catering for societies’ demands in accordance
with consumers’ needs and whims. Thanks to these Chinese traders,
merchandise was put into circulation and distributed through the
import-export activities. Today, almost everything can be found in Cholon,
not to mention the food and foodstuffs prepared by Chinese chefs. In other
words, to fully enjoy food you have to eat in Cholon. It is not that you can
find all the specialties, all the delicious dishes of the world and the
southern region in Cholon but it is the eating ambience – good cooks,
exciting atmosphere, the generosity, the hospitality that Cholon’s Chinese
show during eating sprees – now also a trait of southern Vietnamese.
Ancient residential quarters or at least their relics, can be found in
Cholon, such as the famous Lord and Lady’s Shrines, the various schools of
martial art, the homes of Lion and Kylin
dancing teams…Truly, Cholon is a typical Chinese community with a full
range of activities reflecting the characteristic of the Saigon Chinese.
In 1861, French colonialists
invaded and occupied Saigon in their effort to break the “closed door”
policy of the Nguyen dynasty. By then, Saigon had already established its
own local ways of life by people coming from the southern plains, the
coastal central region and various Khmer and Chinese communities. The
trading with China and India had brought religious and philosophical ideas
that complemented the existing Buddhism and various schools of ethical
thought. Along with French colonialists, Western civilization flooded
Saigon. Positive elements were brought by doctors, explorers, architects,
engineers, and Catholic missionaries who came with the French legionnaires,
the back-up force for the colonial rulers. The essence of French culture
took root and bloomed in novel and exotic fields like technology,
philosophy, religion, art, archeology, literature, culinary art, to the
highest Western standards.
The Dien Bien Phu victory
(May 7, 1954) marked the downfall of French colonialism in Vietnam. The
Geneva treaty temporarily bisected Vietnam and urged the historic migration
from the north to the south. In fact, northerners had come to the south long
before this event but the 1954 migration was the opportunity for the
northern plain civilization to move to Saigon. Settlements of the uprooted
northerners like the “Ong Ta” area changed the face of Saigon with their
northern style well-organized communities. But the generosity of the
southerners enabled them to adapt to the northerners’ discipline, a new
trait for Saigonese. Most notable was the model of setting up communities by
their common profession, allowing for the easy establishing of a
professional association or vocational society, to help protect each other
in the fight against the control of the market by “foreign corporate
sharks”. Food wise, Saigonese now had on their menu specialties like pho,
steamed meat rolls, spring rolls, green rice flakes, cakes, and drinks like
green tea, kudzu dried powder and the hookah pipe for smoking. For fashion,
the “ao dai”, a modification of the colorful and unique “four-piece
dress” of northern girls, made its debut about this eventful period. This
dress then contributed its part in the enriching of Vietnamese culture and
in the enlivening of the Vietnamese characteristic in the then pro-Western
fashion trend in Saigon. It seemed that at this point the breath of the
northern plain civilization started to blend in with the way of life of
Saigonese.
Saigon in the period of a
divided Vietnam. Late in the fifties, taking advantage of the weakened and
shaky French colonialism in Indochina, American imperialists pushed the
French aside and moved into southern Vietnam. Saigon then bore the brunt of
the American-style of life. During this period, new notions and new schools
of thought clashed with old ones, creating a state of complicated cultural
disorder. However, Saigon had undergone and been tempered throughout decades
of unrest and was competent in sorting and adopting essential quality from
the new wave of cultural concepts to enrich its age-old experience. In
short, having undergone the two modern-time conflicts with powerful
opponents, Saigon had to face stressful challenges but was able to retain
its own cultural characteristics.
Emerging triumphant on April 30, 1975, Saigon had the honor of being named Ho Chi Minh City in 1976 and started a new cycle of transformation. The adopting of new Socialist concepts was not without difficulty but the flexibility of its aesthetic attributes allowed Saigon to gradually establish itself as a new cultural and economic beacon for the country.
The
trend of global integration has seen Saigon implement the renovation policies
that originated from the Party’s sixth National Congress in 1986.
Consequently, Saigon-HCM City has had the opportunity to demonstrate its
refinement and to invite other countries to come in with open dialogue and
cultural cooperation. In the new millennium, Saigon-HCM City is going to be the
gateway for talks and cooperation and certainly be in direct contact with new
cultural inflows from all over the world. Once again, Saigon might have to show
its ability to withstand culture shocks and to learn from the experience to
improve its own ways of life.