[Vnbiz] Building the American-Vietnamese friendship and understanding
huong luong
huongluongdc at yahoo.com
Tue Jun 12 08:02:45 PDT 2007
Craig,
I am glad to hear that you think my idea might work. I would love to talk with you more about establishing an exchange program for American students to go to Vietnam for language study, visit, field trips and internship. I am really passionate about this two years ago, but was too busy with school. And I need supports from CACC in Vietnam to help me with setting up a host family program, internship oppotunities there.
I know it is more difficult to bring Vietnamese students to the U.S....so we will bring Americans to Vietnam to enhancing understanding and friendship, and of course alot of potential opportunity in the future. If we can't come to America, then we will bring America to us :))
Vietnam is becoming a "hot" topic in many universities, then students become more concerned about the country and are interested to have a chance to go there and experience first hand after reading tons of books, listening stories about the war.
I am based in DC, so I might ask the embassy to help in organizing programs with relevent organizations (cultural, education exchange) in Vietnam or assisting with visa process. Or it would be great if CACC on this forum to cooperate with us from VN. And I will try to work on exchange program for Vietnamese students to the U.S, but I guess it will be much more difficult, but does not mean impossible.
hugs,
Huong
my personal email: huongluongdc at yahoo.com for further contact on this project.
Craig Stevenson <cstevenson2000 at gmail.com> wrote:
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Huong and ALL,
I agree with much of your sentiment toward many of the points you raise regarding US media, attitudes toward voting, and knowledge of world affairs. For the US in the present era, similar to Vietnam and everywhere else throughout the world, education is paramount. Deriving one's knowledge and perspective from national, essentially popular news outlets, is simply a waste of time. Far better outlets exist; web, think tank, professional and academic journals, panels and conference round-tables. With such an explosion of knowledge in humanities education, there are millions upon millions of more discerning consumers of information for a very wide range of disciplines in the US. Yet, normally, Americans are essentially focused on things more parochial; those things directly related to each their individual lives. As to domestic politics too seriously, I would think that most consider it only superficially. Yet, the fact remains that there are millions upon millions of those
learned and dedicated to whatever their goal(s) might be in respect to their political beliefs. Which reminds that there are millions upon millions, perhaps billions, or all, who take some belief seriously, and as humans, often too seriously.
I really liked your ideas Huong related to younger Americans, Universities, Exchanges, etc... I have always been an advocate of letting people 26 and under to know that there are a tremendous amount of opportunity available for exchanges and such. But few Americans ever take advantage of these opportunities. I would be interested in participating in an effort to catalog such opportunities. Further to work on strategies for marketing to college students and professional associations. Would love to brainstorm. Open source open courseware could be used to facilitate team interaction, members from wherever they may be assuming others are interested (hopefully).
We could catalog programs/initiatives that involve VN or US citizen opportunities. We could contact local rotaries and request they sponsor for exchanges with identified organizations in Vietnam. Really so many other things. I will offer more ideas later as at present I have many things to do.
Cheers,
Craig
On 6/10/07, huong luong <huongluongdc at yahoo.com> wrote: [ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Anh Hoanh,
Great idea. This is completely my personal experience. I don't meet many Americans who hate me...I met some Vietnamese-Americans here who seem to be more sensitive to me more than Americans and I can understand the reason well enough for not feeling bad about it.
Americans appear to be ignorant rather than hateful people in my opinion. Vietnam is not the only country ignored by the American public. Why? look at the content covered by media here: they talk entire day about Paris Hilton or Anna Smith, but less than 30' of news around the world (I am not sure about other paid channels, but I do have basic channels like CNN, MSNBC...the best is BBC, 30's ABC world news with Charlie Gibson). I feel I get more news about the world in VN rather than in the US even VN is known for media control and sensorship. U.S free press in wrapped up in domestic issues or international issues that relate directly to domestic politics. The entertainment industry here is too big that they can produce enough domestic program for their audience. They don't have time to show other countries to their people and audience (oh, maybe travel channel). However, domestic politics play a big part in American lifestyle b/c they take their voting right "too"
seriously. That's why nothing else matters. And media will broadcast what its people want to hear.
I like the idea of working/volunteering with NGOs (association of doctors, EL teaching...) to bring more Americans to VN to help...I support the Peace Corp (but not approved yet for political reasons), alumni networks,
I don' have a big idea to contribute...but I humbly ask CACC on this forum who are executives, business managers in different sectors to consider if we can coordinate with universities in the US to bring their students to VN for internships, field trips (with our assisance in the U.S)... I met a lot of students at SAIS and asked them why they chose SEA studies or China studies..simply the decision comes from their first experience overseas. If more students hear about VN, they will be interested in the country and the region.
If CACC have intership opportunities in VN, please let me or CACC like anh Hoanh and others here know, we can post in university websites, I am sure american students will be interested in going to VN as adventures.
EL teaching mission in VN might be helpful. We can advertise in universities that we need EL teachers in VN during summer breaks, winter breaks with hosting family programs.
I also like the programs of the OPERATION Smile in VN by bringing volunteering doctors/dentists to VN to treat children. This kind of activities enhance the mutual understanding/ love of both sides. I met some doctors and talked with them...it turned out many of them frustrated for not being picked by Operation Smile to go to VN even they are willing to pay for the trip and pay fees if required. I start thinking if we can promote this kind of activities b/t two countries...it would be great.
and last but not least, TOURISM, tourism and tourism....i personally advocate VN tourism with not only Vietnamese-American here, but with any American I run into on streets, in restaurants...as soon as they know I am from VN. And of course, I used many friends of mine as "not-so-volunteering" guides when they are there :))
Any other ideas?
Huong
Tran Dinh Hoanh <tdhoanh at gmail.com > wrote:
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Dear CACC,
I have been thinking about this issue for a while, but I am reluctant about writing this down, because every time I come up with an idea for action, I am afraid that I will have to run the project (I have tons of projects already on my hands). Anyway, I have always felt that the US-VN understanding should be increased, especially from the US side. The Vietnamese in general know the US well, but the American don't know Vietnam well. Most of them, including the politicos in Washington, still think of Vietnam more as a war than as a beautiful country with a wonderful people.
So how do we help improve the mutual understand between the two countries? In this family alone, we have Vietnamese American, we have Vietnamese students in the US, we have many Vietnamese with superb English. Over the years, Vietnam has many US alumni, i.e. graduates of US universities. So can we come up with simple mechanism to do that?
I know that there is government-run US-Vietnam Society (Hoi Viet My) in Hanoi and its leaders (anh Vu Xuan Hong, anh Hoang Cong Thuy, anh Pham Khac Lam ,etc..) are actually my personal friends. But I am talking about a people-based mechanism ( i.e., non-government). And I don't like the idea of a typical 503(c) organization with all kinds of fund raising activities and reports, because you spend most of your daily life doing fundraising and writing reports!!! (But if you like the idea of 503(c), fine with me!). I am thinking about a network of friends focusing on things that make the American and the Vietnamese love each other more.
Any idea?
Hoanh
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
_______________________________________________
To subscribe/unsubscribe, please contact admins at
vnbizadmin at vietlinks.net
Info at http://mail.saigon.com/mailman/listinfo/vnbiz
Archive at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/vnbiz/
or http://groups-beta.google.com/group/VNBIZforum/
or http://mail.saigon.com/pipermail/vnbiz
---------------------------------
Never miss an email again!
Yahoo! Toolbar alerts you the instant new Mail arrives. Check it out.
_______________________________________________
To subscribe/unsubscribe, please contact admins at
vnbizadmin at vietlinks.net
Info at http://mail.saigon.com/mailman/listinfo/vnbiz
Archive at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/vnbiz/
or http://groups-beta.google.com/group/VNBIZforum/
or http://mail.saigon.com/pipermail/vnbiz
_______________________________________________
To subscribe/unsubscribe, please contact admins at
vnbizadmin at vietlinks.net
Info at http://mail.saigon.com/mailman/listinfo/vnbiz
Archive at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/vnbiz/
or http://groups-beta.google.com/group/VNBIZforum/
or http://mail.saigon.com/pipermail/vnbiz
---------------------------------
Take the Internet to Go: Yahoo!Go puts the Internet in your pocket: mail, news, photos & more.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.saigon.com/pipermail/vnbiz/attachments/20070612/c77e53cf/attachment.html
More information about the Vnbiz
mailing list