Van Kieu ethnic group follows President HCM’s moral example
(VOV) - The Van Kieu of Quang Tri province are the only ethnic group in Vietnam who have adopted President Ho Chi Minh’s family name “Ho”.
The Van Kieu continue to study and follow President Ho Chi Minh’s moral example in their everyday life.
In the spring of 1946, President Ho Chi Minh sent some of his staff to visit the Van Kieu and other ethnic groups in the remote mountain areas of Quang Tri province. They were given photos of President Ho Chi Minh and new clothes.

They agreed to take President Ho Chi Minh’s family name as their own.
In peace time, like other ethnic groups, the Van Kieu have worked hard to improve their life and develop the nation. They have changed their traditional nomadic life to growing wet rice and building large-scale animal farms.
Ho Thanh Binh, head of Ka Tang hamlet in Lao Bao township, said, “Together we study President Ho Chi Minh’s moral example in May each year. Revolutionary cadres teach us how to grow rice and trees. President Ho told us that if we don’t’ try to overcome our difficulties, our lives will be poorer and unstable."
"Following his teaching, we now have concrete houses instead of thatch houses. Meetings to study Uncle Ho’s teaching always attract a large number of villagers,” he added.
Van Kieu people in Lao Bao have a strong determination to escape poverty. They share their knowledge and experience in raising animals, growing trees, and doing business.

"Khe Da hamlet adopted a model for women supporting each other in poverty reduction. Nghia Trung and Tan Kim hamlets have organic vegetable growing models. Women in Ka Tang hamlet have a model for storing surplus rice,” she stressed.
Several Van Kieu families have become better-off with stable incomes. The family of patriarch Ho Mo in A Doi commune earns approximately US$2,500 a year from growing coffee trees and raising animals.
A couple named Ho Pa Nuc and Ho Thi Hoa in Huong Loc earn a yearly net profit of US$1,500 from husbandry. The family of Ho Thanh Binh, which earns about US$10,000 a year, has taken the lead in growing trees and building a farm economy.
“If we miscalculate, our work will not be effective. I tell them what they should do. They have shifted from growing rice to bananas to earn about US$3,500 per ha. They grow cassavas on previously deserted land,” Binh noted.
The lives of the Van Kieu have improved since they learned how to improve the yields of wet rice, vegetables, and trees, and began raising fish and sending their children to school.