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The silent preservers of Ho Chi Minh's legacy

Among the rustic thatched houses in Sen Village, amidst the light scent of incense every morning, there are people silently representing President Ho Chi Minh’s family, preserving each relic, each memory in the Kim Lien Relic Site. They quietly look after and care for the simple but sacred memories in Uncle Ho’s homeland.

Báo Nghệ AnBáo Nghệ An15/05/2025

Keep the "warmth" of Him in every souvenir

One afternoon in May, when the summer sun was shining golden on the old thatched roofs in Lang Sen, I met Mr. Tran Dinh Thuc - an employee of the Collection, Inventory, Display and Preservation Department, Kim Lien Relic Site Management Board. At that time, he and a few colleagues were quietly burning incense at the ancestral altar of Mr. Nguyen Sinh Nham - President Ho Chi Minh's grandfather.

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Mr. Tran Dinh Thuc and his colleagues burn incense at the ancestral altar of Mr. Nguyen Sinh Nham. Photo: Diep Thanh

Amidst the light incense scent, the Kim Lien landscape appears like a quiet painting. There, 18 staff members of the Collection, Inventory, Display and Preservation Department, Kim Lien Relic Site Management Board are like 18 members of a big family, silently representing Uncle Ho's family to look after each house, take care of each relic, and cultivate the incense of ancestors. That work, seemingly simple, but requires special feelings, cannot be done just out of duty.

As one of the people who have been attached to the relic site for the longest time, Mr. Thuc was born and raised in Kim Lien. His mother belongs to the Nguyen Sinh family, so since childhood, the image of Uncle Ho has been close and familiar like flesh and blood. During his 32 years of attachment to the relic site, he does not see it as just a job, but also as a source, a place to belong.

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Conservationists clean and sanitize the relic site. Photo: CSCC

Every day, before 7am - the time the relic site opens to visitors, Mr. Thuc and his colleagues have finished sweeping, cleaning, and checking each thatched roof, wooden frame, and artifact. The work is not noisy but full of discipline, requiring meticulousness and carefulness in every smallest detail. On rainy, sunny or stormy days, the "housekeepers" for Uncle Ho must carefully check and adjust each pillar, beam, and wall to ensure that everything is always intact and sturdy as in the beginning.

Talking about his memories at work, Mr. Thuc recalled: Once, while guiding tourists, a Japanese politician asked for his permission to touch the bed where Uncle Ho used to rest. "I want to feel the warmth of President Ho Chi Minh" - the visitor said, unable to hide his emotions. At that moment, Mr. Thuc understood more clearly than ever the meaning of the work he was doing.

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Mr. Thuc next to the golden phoenix tree planted by comrade Do Muoi. Photo: Diep Thanh

Not only preserving artifacts, Mr. Thuc was also assigned the task of choosing trees for leaders to plant as souvenirs at the relic site. When choosing a tree for General Secretary Do Muoi to plant, when asked why he did not choose a banyan tree, he replied: "Because every time Uncle Ho's birthday comes, this tree will bloom, like a good wish sent to him." That answer made the General Secretary very pleased. The golden phoenix tree that year is now taller than the surrounding trees, showing off its brilliant colors every May.

Among the young generation of the Collection, Inventory, Display and Preservation Department, Tran Thi Hoai Thuong - born in 1997, is the youngest. When she first started her career, she felt bewildered by the strict requirements. But gradually, during each dusting session, each time checking the items, Thuong realized that working in this space imbued with historical values, listening to and retelling stories about Uncle Ho, is a rare fortune.

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Tourists visit Kim Lien Relic Site during major national holidays. Photo: CSCC

Ms. Nguyen Thi Minh Hue, Head of Collection - Inventory - Display and Preservation Department, shared: "The relic is like our second home. Every time we welcome groups of visitors, every time we burn incense, we carry within us a silent pride. We understand that preserving relics is not only preserving material things, but also preserving intangible values ​​- memories, emotions, lessons about the personality of the person".

The person who helps the souvenir "tell the story"

At Kim Lien Relic Site, among the 18 people who silently preserve each thatched roof and each artifact every day, there is one person who takes on a more special mission: to preserve, systematize and continue telling the story of Uncle Ho through each document, each photo, each piece of memorabilia. That person is Ms. Vuong Thi Nga - a small but persistent woman, as quiet as the work she pursues.

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Ms. Vuong Thi Nga is the person who preserves and systematizes memorabilia and documents about Uncle Ho. Photo: Diep Thanh

Graduated from the History Department of Vinh University, having worked for more than 10 years at the Ho Chi Minh Museum (Hanoi), at the end of 2023, Ms. Nga decided to return to her hometown of Nam Dan, applying for a job at the Collection, Inventory, Display and Preservation Department of Kim Lien Relic Site. Here, she is the only person responsible for all the work of archiving, inventorying artifacts, documents and building specialized exhibitions about Uncle Ho.

Ms. Nga’s work starts with seemingly simple details. That is managing the archive, arranging, classifying, and updating each artifact and each original file. But behind that is a hidden pressure, how not to miss any piece of memory, how to preserve each artifact most accurately, most accurately, when all carry the breath of history.

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Exhibitions at Kim Lien Relic Site are being managed and managed by Ms. Nga. Photo: CSCC

For her, each time she organizes an exhibition, it is not a simple journey. She said that the most difficult part is not the display, but the selection of the topic and the outline. “When I have not yet come up with an idea, I sometimes have to stay up all night, because each topic must reflect the depth of Uncle Ho's personality, and must be new and close to the people,” she shared.

Once the outline was formed, the next task was even more rigorous: Searching, synthesizing, verifying each line of documents, each photo, ensuring absolute authenticity. There were times when, to select a few representative photos for a topic, Ms. Nga had to review thousands of documentary photos, work simultaneously on many computer screens, take notes, and compare every small detail. If she didn't finish her work at the office, she would bring it home. The long evenings spent by the desk lamp, the long days of diligently checking each printout, each small annotation under each artifact, had become a familiar part of her life.

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Ms. Vuong Thi Nga is also the person who preserves memorabilia related to Uncle Ho. Photo: Diep Thanh

"Each photo, each exhibit, must be able to tell a story about Uncle Ho - simple yet profound" - she said, her eyes shining with passion.

Not only stopping at displaying, Ms. Nga also pays special attention to conveying values ​​about Uncle Ho to children - the future generation of the country. Small stories, simple daily details about Uncle Ho are skillfully incorporated by her, so that the image of Uncle Ho appears familiar, close and exemplary in the pages of Children's Newspaper. Ms. Nga's work is not noisy, not colorful, but contributes significantly so that each visitor, each generation, when returning to Kim Lien, can see there a close, great but very ordinary Uncle Ho.

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Through her writings, Ms. Nga spreads His immense love to the future generations of the country. Photo: Diep Thanh

Amidst all the changes, there are still people who choose to stay here to preserve. Preserving not only the roof and the relics, but also the memories of a person and a nation. So that every step back to Kim Lien, we can still hear the echoes of history./.

Source: https://baonghean.vn/nhung-nguoi-lang-tham-gin-giu-di-san-ho-chi-minh-10297299.html


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