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Brocade
making at Hoang Hoa Hamlet on Silkworm Island.
Houses more
than a 100 years old, a communal well, banana plants and
areca palms – the Hoang Hoa Hamlet has them all and more, in
more or less pristine condition.
Enter the
hamlet and you have stepped into a village typical to the
southern part of central Vietnam in the last century.
And to take
this step back in time, all you have to do is to visit the
Tam (Silkworm) Island , just 5 km off Nha Trang.
The story of
how an ancient village came into being earlier this year in
a new location begins with Nguyen Van Phung, a 47-year-old
stone collector and rock-garden artisan.
Phung
“collected ancient houses” and began to build the Hoang Hoa
Hamlet on a 400sq.m plot in Phuoc Dong Commune seven years
ago in the suburbs of Nha Trang.
Hoang Hoa
Hamlet has five old houses build more than a century ago,
one of them nearly 200 years old.
Another one
of the five houses was built on 36 pillars with ancient
furniture and household tools like a rice-hulling mill and a
kerosene-fuelled mantle used by well-off families in the
region in the early 20th century.

Hoang
Hoa Hamlet on Silkworm Island off Nha Trang City.
Antique
collectors considered Hoang Hoa Hamlet a museum of old
houses and household appliances from the southern part of
central Vietnam .
But Phung
says his aim was to preserve the old houses so that the
later generations could understand how their forefathers
lived on this land.
For example,
Phung says, even residents in the countryside can hardly see
wooden rice pounding pestles and mortars and rice-hulling
mills which were used by locals five decades ago. Haystacks
which fed cattle around the year have also disappeared.
All these
wooden tools have been replaced by machines, he adds.
His
painstaking work attracted the attention of Doan Van Trang,
president and CEO of Silkworm joint-stock Co, developer of
Hon Tam Resort.
Trang entered
into an agreement with Phung to relocate Hoang Hoa Hamlet on
the island in order to make the Hon Tam more attractive.
Phung says he
was impressed by the Resort’s ambitious plan to preserve the
country’s cultural values and that this influenced his
decision to move the Hoang Hoa Hamlet from Phuoc Dong
Commune to the Silkworm Island .
The hamlet
now boats cultural characteristics of ethnic groups in
Central Vietnam, including brocade making and pottery
production of the Cham people, and classical theatre
particular to Central Vietnam are performed here.
An overseas
Vietnamese who visited Silkworm Island last week said he was
fascinated by the daily activities of water rice cultivating
society he found in the ancient hamlet. He said could never
get to hear the melodious sound of the monochord and the
cooing of spotted doves anywhere else world.
“We’ve
created a variety of tourism products that are different
from other resorts in Nha Trang,” say Trang.
He also plans
to re-create traditional festivals, including one to honour
the founder of country’s traditional medicine, Hai Thuong Lan Ong, during the Physicians’ Day. (VNA) |