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What is success? “Success is simple, more simple than you often think,
success comes when dad and son try to cook a favorite dish for mother on
Mother's day or International women's day even if it is not as delicious
as others do” Those are the sentences a young Vietnamese pupil usually
writes to answer to the topic at a test . How significant a dinner is
when members of family have not met each other for a long time! When
some foreigners want to explore Vietnamese culture, they often come to
families, go to local markets and buy things for a meal. Is this the way
to learn how to cook? The answer is "Yes" but the result is more than
that.
Traditional values of Vietnamese lifestyle were deeply affected by
Confucian ethics. During thousand years under the invasion and
domination by Chinese, Vietnamese culture was also permeated by their
Confucian philosophical beliefs. It was believed that "in order to
achieve human perfection, one must follow the established codes of
behavior which include reverence for ancestors and respect for
elders...The importance is not upon the individual's accomplishments but
upon his duty to family and society"
Most Vietnamese placed more emphasis on their roles, privileges and
obligations within this group than on their own individual desires. The
Vietnamese household traditionally followed the extended
multi-generational pattern. The parents, their sons and their wives,
their children, and unmarried siblings usually constituted a Vietnamese
household. In this extended family, the most important expectation was
the respect for the elders. Hence, the family decisions were made by the
parents and grandparents.
For centuries in Vietnam, traditional family values were accomplished by
the fulfillment of traditional roles - the role of man and woman as
parents. Since the highest status in Vietnamese families is given to the
man or the father, he had absolute authority in the household. As he
provided the main source of income, he was never expected to work in the
kitchen or to cook. After work, he returned home and relaxed. As a head
of household, he had the final decision in all matters. The father,
however, had the duty to exercise restraint and wisdom in running his
family in order to deserve his respected position.
Having a boy in family was a "must" because the eldest son would assume
the duties of his father when he died. A family which had no son to
continue the process was superstitiously thought to have disappeared
forever.
In
a patriarchal society, Vietnamese woman had limited rights and took a
secondary place in family. Women were brought up according to a strict
discipline and have been traditionally less educated than men.
After marriage, woman became housewife and mother. She was expected to
be depended upon her husband, took care of children and even
grandchildren as well as performed all household tasks. A wife can be
unhappy in her marriage, nevertheless, rather than accepts divorce; the
family encouraged her to sacrifice and to endure the difficulties of the
marriage for the sake of her children.
In
Vietnam, family meal is very important. It is one part of a happy family
especially when people become busier with their business. In some big
cities such as Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh, parents are always busy. They have
to get up early in the morning
to take their children to schools before going to work. In the past, a
wife often prepares breakfast for the whole family but this tradition or
habit has been ignored somehow due to limited time.
These
days, the value of family’s meals has been still highly appreciated as
dinner is an opportunity for them to share a meal and talk together
after a hard day. That the reason why restaurants have still been
strange to many people and families in Vietnam. For many people, family
meal is one way to keep their family happy. The meal is not simply
understood as lunch or dinner; it can be understood as feeling and
sympathy, sharing and care. In many Vietnam families, the wives know
which are their husbands' or children' favorite dishes. Then, they try
to make those dishes as frequently they can or at least on special
occasions.
Come back to the parental role in Vietnamese family. Obedience and
respect were the traditional virtues which Vietnamese children were
taught to exhibit in their family. Discipline and physical punishment
were acceptable remedies for disobedience. When parents grew old,
children were expected to take care of them to compensate for the gift
of birth and upbringing.
Boys and girls are not free to do what they want. Yet, girls are under
strict supervision. Western style courtship and romance were seen as
inappropriate things for unmarried children. As virginity is cherished,
pregnancy out of wedlock is a grave disgrace to the family. For their
children's marriage, parents generally made decision because they could
judge better.
Vietnamese placed a higher value on education rather than on material
success. That the reason why parents encouraged their children to study
and excel in their education. Vietnamese parents had a high regard for
it which was considered as a way for family advancement.
Source - Think
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