Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hanoi. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2020

Hanoi Out-Takes

We get our news over the internet and rarely turn on the TV, even when there
are CNN or BBC options; Vicki was running through the local channels one
night and happened upon this cooking show and seeming vegematic demo

Typical t-shirts

I prefer chicken or pork but concede there is no disputing
matters of taste

Vicki has become adept at spotting
influencers...


Today's wedding pix

She's looking at her phone, of course

You can't win if you don't play

If only it were blue

City park rules

Never saw a squirrel in Hanoi

They don't wear black pajamas anymore

Swirling ad holders; should have made a video of all four going at once


Police truck

Trees always win

Outside a government building: I interpreted this to mean "don't use old-fashioned
cameras"; Vicki said good luck explaining that to the police

In the two+ weeks we've been here, Vietnam has had 16
confirmed cases, all now recovered; they were the first to
close off flights and borders from China

The greening of Hanoi: first building

Hoa Lo Prison, AKA Hanoi Hilton

Not all the sights we visit are of the uplifting sort: Auschwitz, the Dokumentation Center, etc. Hoa Lo Prison, aka as the "Hanoi Hilton," is another such place, with unpleasant and disturbing memories for two nations. Humanity at its worst, but also perhaps its best.
It began in the late 19th century as a French prison, said to
be the largest in Indochina

























Having destroyed a culturally significant village and its
monuments (click to enlarge)

























As it was

Much of Hoa Lo was razed after the war, to make way for
the Hanoi Tower and other new structures

What remains is now a museum; note the broken glass still surmounting the
walls
 
Essentially there are two sections of the museum: political prisoners during the
French colonial regime, exceptionally brutal and repressive, from all we have seen,
here and in Laos; and the American POW section

A life-sized sculpture/diorama of the political prisoner section, late 1940s perhaps


Solitary

The almond tree

In the women's section

Women and their children, of course

The guillotine, in use until the French withdrew in 1954

Now in the American POW section, first, a bit of "history"

World condemnation of the Vietnam War (or, the American War, as they call it)

American condemnation too

Peace monument

The US' first ambassador to Vietnam was Douglas Peterson, an alumnus of Hoa Lo

Effects of US POWs

Photos of the happy times US POWs had at Hoa Lo--all very much disputed
by accounts of privation, torture, abuse, and disregard of Geneva Conventions



John McCain; being rescued; being treated by Vietnamese
medical personnel


A place of great pain and dispute...still


Temple Of Literature

We knew it was not going to be "literature" in any Western sense. A better rendering might be Temple of Learning. From the 11th century on, it was a school of higher learning, created to educate prospective mandarins and then to select the best of them, on behalf of the king/emperor/whatever. Mandarins were the high officials who governed the realm, its provinces, etc., on behalf of the monarch. All very Chinese and indeed very Confucian, reminding us of some of the things we saw in China years ago. No mention of Homer or Dante or Shakespeare. But very old, as these things go.
Entrance

Good signage throughout, in Vietnamese, French, and
English (too)

Click to enlarge and be enlightened

And beautiful landscaping too

One passes through a series of buildings, gates, courtyards, reflecting the various
stages of learning


I particularly liked the bit about the humanities...



Near the end, a small forest of stelae, on which are inscribed
the names of those who passed the rigorous exams

Thus; click to enlarge

Apparently they had no notion of students' privacy

In the final big courtyard; the Court of Sages (I liked that)


Much Chinese bonsai around; penjing it's called, and these are very large specimens

Confucius (?)

Roof detail

Tree always wins over stone

In the final hall, an interesting set of traditional musical
instruments, perhaps between performances



Helpful model of the complex

Drum house