Walking up Punahou Street, I see the congested road filled with cars of all shapes and sizes, bumper to bumper. I also see students walking past me, bicyclist riding on the road, and senior citizens relaxing at Punahou Square Park. I knew I was close to Pōhakuloa as more and more students, some with their parents, walk past me. So much more that there is not enough room on the sidewalk for both me and the students and their parents to walk on.…
This cover represents the geographical context of Vietnam, the innocence of the main characters (personal context), the freedom of the late 1960’s (social context) and the Vietnam War period (Historical context).…
Presents a first person narrative describing the author's travels through Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam with his father, a Vietnam War veteran, as they reflect on the changes the city has faced since the conflict.…
In the first chapter of book David Chandler’s book Voices from S-21, Terror and History in Pol Pot’s Secret Prison, it talked about how after two weeks of fighting Dk (Democratic Kampuchea) had fled with all of their followers. On January 8 two Vietnamese photographers were drawn to a building that on the gate it said: “Fortify the spirit of revolution…the people and the party.” After…
First of all, Pol Pot first decision was to cut the capital off from contact of outside supply and effectively put the city of Phnom Penh under siege. The Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot’s followers, went to evacuate the entire city. Houses were emptied, the high class citizens left the city, and even the sick people at the hospital were forced to leave. Some victims who are still alive today insist that he forced everyone to leave because the American bombers were coming to bomb the city so people ran away. That was a lie. He wanted to re-create the city, but nothing worked. Jarret B. Wollstein, a founder of the…
Overthrown by Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, Cambodians were forced to follow an organized extremist program to simulate Maoist communism. All laws and rights previously cherished by the country were aborted and Pol Pot’s plan was to annihilate traditional Cambodian society. People whose families had lived in Cambodia for countless generations were suddenly forced on extremely short notice to flee their homes. The Khmer Rouge ruthlessly murdered any person on the spot if they refused to leave their homes or even took too long to leave. Those who didn’t obey orders were shot. Babies, sick children, the elderly and disabled people were also shot for not being able to leave soon enough.…
The smell of the flowers gives off a calming effect. The birds occasionally swoop past and there is a gentle breeze coming through the trees. Some people are walking their dogs. The dog’s fur is a soft pillow that cushions a person while they sleep. The dog’s nose is moist and cold. The asphalt is nice and smooth. There are no cracks or bumps and it adds to the surrounds. The sunlight comes through the trees creating patterns on the ground. The sunlight’s heat is gentle and not too hot. The whole park is clean and family friendly. It is an atmosphere perfect for enjoying any day of the week.…
Pham travels to Vietnam to search for his roots in hopes to construct his identity. For Pham in the search of his identity he flies to Vietnam to ride his bike, and also to find his roots. As he first gets off the airplane he is already is immediately receiving dirty aware of others who looks at him disdainfully because he is a “viet-kieu” which means foreign Vietnamese. Then as he is at the baggage claim while retrieving his luggage, to his amazement he sees the workers tear up his bike that had been stuck in the claim belt. That hit a soft spot in him because that bike had been through so much with Pham. From then on his impressions of Vietnamese people were bad, He developed a negative impression of Vietnamese people and he automatically thought of them as a lower class persons than Americans human than he was. Pham in order to go back to his roots needs to humble himself as a true Vietnamese. Then he will understand his identity and appreciate his…
Sichuan is the home only for my grandfather, but not for me. Even though I can speak the dialect, I do not belong to this place. I am not from Sichuan. I am from Beijing and I am a Beijinger with no doubt. My grandpa is from Sichuan, because here is the place where he was born and raised, where his close families live and where all his old memories keep. A part of his life interacted, is interacting, and will interact with the city. When he saw young kids playing in the river in front of our house, he remembered the afternoon when he skipped from the school and played with his childhood friends. When we gathered and ate around the dining table, he remembered the Chinese New Year’s Eve dinner when he first met his brother’s wife. Every object, every smell and every person could activate a part of his memory, even a single grain of sand. His root is in here. However, there is not such emotional affiliation between me and all those objects. I am an outsider who only amazed at how beautiful the scenery was and how delicious the food was. Nothing else. I am just a visitor of the city who understand its…
But not anymore. I turned at a corner in a hutong. The honking of vehicles and demolition work of old buildings jarred on my nerves. I tried to stop the destruction of them by giving out leaflets about the protection of historical relics, but my efforts were largely fruitless. I desperately wanted to capture the memory of the old Beijing, but I couldn’t find a way.…
It was made official when the communist party took control over the city of Phnom Penh in April 17, 1975, declaring their victory in the Civil War. A few days later, the Khmer Rouge had forced an estimated two million residents of Phnom Penh to the countryside to take up strictly rice farming. Thousands died during the evacuation, but the nearly the total two million evacuated were killed by the end of the Khmer’s regime (Dy, 2007). Often compared to the Holocaust, the Cambodian Genocide replayed many similar factors such as ethnic cleansing, and hopes for creating a new Cambodia in general. Those ill, protestant, or handicapped were killed on the spot or imprisoned, and those deemed useless were executed (Panh, 2003). Pol Pot named this year Year Zero: a new beginning, where he would rid the country of school, hospitals, churches, and religion. He aimed to return Cambodia to an agricultural farming nation, nothing more than that. The Khmer Rouge killed more than a majority of teachers and doctors, and destroyed most of all schools in the process (Stevens, 2010). Labor camps that Cambodians were later sent to became known as the “Killing Fields” and most of the food grown there was kept for the Khamers Rouges, leaving little to none for the laborers themselves. By the end of the Rouge’s four-year terror reign, Cambodia had lost its elite class, proving to have devastating effect in…
As I left the Indianapolis airport at almost midnight, I knew that I was in an unfamiliar place, however, I couldn't see it either. Compared to the sparkling night cities in California where I grew up in and left behind, here it was almost completely dark, with only the dim highway lights to aid our vision. I grew up in the city where a large Vietnamese population resides for up to 12 years called Little Saigon. Always in a comfortable place, the culture outside of my home resembles the inside as well—unlike Noblesville, Indiana. I was paranoid about how large the difference would be. The food, the places, the…
Viet Nam War or Pho are the two popular things that people usually think about when the words “Viet Name” are mentioned. However, there are many interesting things about Viet Nam and its culture that people need to learn and explore more. Throughout the history, Vietnamese’s culture has been shaped and influenced by the Chinese, the French, the Russians, and the Americans. Even though the culture has impacts from all of the outside influences, Vietnamese people still maintain and embrace their own culture.…
In Vietnam, just like here in the United States of America there are many holidays. But Vietnamese New Year is the biggest traditional holiday of the year. It is the first and last moments of a year and it’s a time for families to gather all together on New Year Eve with the firecrackers, special food. This also is the opportunity for students like me to meet old friends after one year abroad, to embrace of lovers after a long year of waiting.…
ริษัทโรงแรมลากูน่า รีสอร์ท แอนด์ โฮเท็ล ที่มีอยู่ 6 แห่งคือโรงแรมบันยันทรี ภูเก็ต โรงแรงเชอราตัน แกรนด์ ลากูน่า ภูเก็ต โรงแรมดุสิตธานี ลากูน่า โรงแรมลากูน่า บีช รีสอร์ท โรงแรมลากูน่า ฮอริเดย์ คลับ รีสอร์ท (ลากูน่า ภูเก็ต) และโรงแรมอลามันดา ลากูน่า ภูเก็ตโดยทั้ง 6 แห่งตั้งอยู่ในพื้นที่เดียวกันในรูปแบบของ City Hotel บริหารโดยทีมงานเดียวกัน ภายใต้การทำโปรโมชั่นเดียวกัน ซึ่งแต่ละโรงแรมก็มีจุดเด่น และเป้าหมายการเจาะกลุ่มลูกค้าไม่เหมือนกัน และหลังจากนั้นก็ได้เปิดตัวโรงแรมบันยันทรี กรุงเทพฯ ในปี 2545 รวมทั้งได้มีการก่อสร้างแห่งที่ 3 คือโรงแรมบันยันทรี เชียงใหม่ และแห่งที่ 4 คือที่สมุย ซึ่งราคาห้องพักเฉลี่ยตั้งแต่ 20,000 – 40,000 บาทต่อคืน ในปี 2548 Banyan Tree Group มีโรงแรมที่บริหารทั้งหมด 15 แห่งและกำลังจะเพิ่มขึ้นอีก 8 แห่งนอกจากนี้ยังมี Gallery อีก 42 แห่ง และสปาอีก 38 แห่งทั่วโลก…