National festival status urged for Hoang Sa rituals
Update: Jan 11, 2010
Authorities in the central province of Quang Ngai have officially asked the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism for the "Hoang Sa Tribute Rituals" to be given national festival status.

The rituals, which have been held annually for hundreds of years on the province’s island district of Ly Son, is a tribute to sailor-soldiers in the Hoang Sa Contingent who crossed the water to Hoang Sa (Paracel) Archipelago to exploit its natural resources and safeguard the country’s sovereignty.

Most of the sailors, many of them native of Ly Son Island, perished. Ly Son’s inhabitants commemorate them at Am Linh Buddhist Temple where souls of lost soldiers are worshipped on the 20th day of the second lunar month.

During the rituals, paper boats with effigies of sailors are launched to sea and respects are paid to the lost sailors’ empty tombs.

A common saying on the island thang hai khao le the linh Hoang Sa, means the island commemorates the soldiers every year in the second lunar month.

During the coming Tet (Lunar New Year) holidays, objects related to the Hoang Sa Contingent have been collected for an exhibition on the island, including soldiers’ possessions, the King’s order to establish the contingent and old maps of the archipelago.
VNS