So that the lullaby may live on forever.In Khuoi Le village, Bang Thanh commune, Mrs. Hoang Thi My, over sixty years old, still maintains the habit of singing lullabies whenever she looks after her grandchildren or in her free time. Since childhood, she has been familiar with lullabies, having learned them from her mother and maternal grandmother. Today, when many young people no longer know how to sing lullabies in the Tay language, she has become the guardian and teacher of lullabies for the village.
Mother's Day: A gentle lullaby connects hearts filled with love.Mother's Day (May 10th) is an occasion for everyone to remember their mothers – the beloved figure who has been with them throughout their lives. For Vietnamese people, the image of a mother is associated with the gentle lullabies of childhood nights, the soothing sounds that accompany us as we grow up.
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The art performance program "Lullaby: The Song That Nourishes Us"On the afternoon of November 29th, at the Ho Chi Minh City Union of Arts and Culture Associations (81 Tran Quoc Thao Street, Xuan Hoa Ward, Ho Chi Minh City), the Music and Singing Association, in collaboration with the Mothers' Club, organized an art performance and discussion program on lullabies: The Song That Nourishes Us.
Lullaby on the Truong Son mountain rangeHNN - In the stilt house, where the kitchen smoke lingers, a soft lullaby echoes: "Sleep, my child, sleep, don't cry anymore, let your father go to work in the fields, let your mother go down to the stream to catch fish for you to eat..." This simple melody has accompanied the Ta Oi, Pa Co, and Co Tu people through countless farming seasons and festivals. For generations, this mother's lullaby has nurtured the souls of countless children of the Truong Son Mountains.