Hanoi (VNA) – The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism was assigned by Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc to sign relevant dossiers for submission t♔o UNESCO, asking it to put “Xꦚoe Thai” dance in the list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The dance has been developed, protected and handed down through generations intact over hundreds of years in many different forms including xoe quat (xoe dance with a fan), xoe khan (xoe dance with a scarf), xoe non (xoe dance with a conical hat) and many others with contents reflecting community activities and expressing the Thai people’s emotion and ancestral spirits.
With gentle and alluring rhythms, dancers usually form a circle around a festive flame and move to the sound of melodic🐓 t꧑raditional music.
The provincial People’s Committee recently sent a document to the Government, the National Commission for UNESCO Vietnam, the National Cultural Heritage Council and the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) to show their determination to follow an assignment by the MCST on seeking the title of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity for xoe danඣce of the province’s Thai ethnic people.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism also affirmed that competent agencies have been compiling dossiers for Xoe Thai dance and Cham pottery making art to seek UNESCO’s recognition.
Cham people in the south central provinces of Binh Thuan and Ninh Thuan, particularly those residing in the Ninh Thuan’s Bau Truc pottery village, have long been renowned for their art of pottery. One of the most outstanding features of the traditional Cham pottery is the technique of shaping their wares by hand rather than by a wheel and their use of simple tools or shells to decorate the products. The pottery is dried under the sun for four to six hours before being fired outdoor over straw or wood.The skills of the Cham have created a variety of products used for daily activities and spiritual worship. Some of the products include cylindrical jars which store water or rice, decorative lamps, reliefs, and statuettes of apsara or gods.
The Bau Truc pottery village is one of the oldest of its kind in Southeast Asia.🧸 About 85 percent of the village’s 400 households make pottery. However, because of industrialisation, the local craft is fading, with a fewer number of workers recorded🙈.
It was noteworthy that “Then” practice of Tay, Nung and Thai ethic groups was named in the UNESCO list of Int🌳angible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in late 2💝019.
Also in the year, the Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism decided to grant the national status to 37 relic sites, and 30 intangible cultural heritage. Many relic sites have been upgraded and turned into tourism destinations.
Vietnam has so far had 13 UNESCO-recognised intangible cultural heritage, and joint e🧔fforts have been made by competent agencies and people of Vietnam to preserve such heritage./.