Hoang Sa tribute rituals held in Quang Ngai
The Feast and Commemoration Festival for Hoang Sa (Paracel) flotilla soldiers (Le khao le the linh Hoang Sa) was held in the An Hai communal temple, on Ly Son island in the central province of Quang Ngai on April 5.
The rituals are a tribute to the sailor-soldiers who left their homeland to tap natural resources and safeguard the country’s sovereignty. (Photo credit: laodong.com.vn) |
The rituals, held annually for hundreds of years on the island in the second month of the lunar calendar, are a tribute to the sailor-soldiers who left their homeland to tap natural resources and safeguard the country’s sovereignty.
According to Vietnam’s feudal state history, the Hoang Sa flotilla was set up to patrol the Hoang Sa and Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelagos to explore resources and defend national island sovereignty when the Nguyen Lords began their reign in the south of the country.
Thousands of sailors overcame roaring waves and storms to survey sea routes, plant milestones and erect steles affirming national territory in Hoang Sa and Truong Sa, and extract marine resources at the orders of the Nguyen Lords. Their missions were full of dangers, and many of them never returned.
During the rituals, paper boats with effigies of sailors are launched into the seas and respects are paid to the lost sailors’ symbolic tombs.
The ceremony is observed in Ly Son and many coastal areas in Quang Ngai.
(Source: nhandan.org.vn)