In the first days of the new year, not only Vietnamese people but also many foreign tourists come to Hanoi’s Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam or Temple of Literature - the first university in Vietnam, to ask for letters and pray for a good new year.
Having a calligraphic work written on red paper to display during the Lunar New Year (Tet) festival, Vietnam’s biggest traditional event is a local tradition to pray for good things. The calligraphers write letters meaning prosperity, longevity, and happiness.
Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam often holds the Spring Calligraphy Festival, hosting exhibitions of excellent calligraphic works, culinary delights, folk games, traditional music performances, water puppet shows, or activities to introduce handicraft works.
Many international tourists come to visit the Temple of Literature on Tet days and enjoy asking for letters at the beginning of the year. Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
Austrian tourists are being introduced to the character sets as well as the meaning of the custom of asking for letters at the beginning of the year. Photo: To Quoc Newspaper
From the elderly... Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
...to young people... Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
... even children ask for letters at the beginning of the year. Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
The handwriting is written by calligraphers or calligraphy masters, dressed in ao dai, a Vietnamese traditional dress, on Do or Diep paper. Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
Cindea GiGi from Romania felt extremely excited and excited when he was able to celebrate Tet for the first time and ask for the first word of the new year at the Temple of Literature - Quoc Tu Giam.
He shared that he likes the tradition of asking for words and giving words in Vietnam. Through it he learns many more profound and meaningful wishes. He asked for the letter 'An' to hope that peace will come to everyone in this new year and he wishes Vietnam will increasingly develop and spread good cultural values to contemporary generations.
GiGi and Thomas from Romania were excited about their calligraphy work. Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
The joy of foreign tourists after getting the first letter of the year. Photo: Van Mieu-Quoc Tu Giam
With inspiration from Ukiyo-e, a Japanese wood painting technique, young Vietnamese artists bring a personal touch to their work, creating an artistic interplay between Vietnam ...
Ha Noi will waive fares for buses and urban rail services during the Hung Kings Commemoration Day, Reunification Day (April 30), and International Labour Day (May 1), covering 128 subsidized bus routes and two metro lines for a total of seven days.
On the morning of September 28, the Viksit Bharat 2025 Race organized by the Embassy of India in Vietnam in collaboration with MY Bharat under the Ministry of Youth and Sports, Government of India was successfully held at Thong Nhat Park, Hanoi. More than 200 runners participated.
On April 19, in Ikuno Ward, Osaka City (Japan), the 9th Vietnam Cultural Festival, reenacting the Hung Kings’ Commemoration Ceremony, was held in a solemn, warm atmosphere rich in national identity.
The ceremony marking Vietnam Disability Day 2026, themed “Breaking Limits - Chasing Dreams - Shining with Confidence,” was jointly organized by the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of National Defense, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee, and the US Embassy in Vietnam.
According to preliminary reports from 34 provinces and centrally governed cities, 76,198,214 out of 76,423,940 eligible voters cast their ballots, representing a turnout of 99.7 per cent - the highest rate on record.
In celebration of International Women’s Day (8 March), from 5-7 March 2026, the Plan Office in Lai Chau, in collaboration with the Lai Chau Women’s Union and the Vietnam Fatherland Front Committees of Dao San and Khong Lao communes, organised a women’s football tournament under the theme “Kicking Away Gender Stereotypes.”
More than three decades after first travelling across Vietnam with a camera and a notebook, British photojournalist Andy Soloman has returned to the country, not only to photograph it again, but to reconnect with the people whose lives he captured in the early 1990s.
Tet, the Vietnamese Lunar New Year, is more than just a holiday. It is a celebration of family, culture, and new beginnings. And for many foreigners, it becomes an unforgettable cultural journey.
In a timely effort to support families and children severely impacted by Storm No. 10 in 2025 (Bualoi), on February 3 in Thanh Hoa Province, World Vision International in Vietnam (WVIV), in coordination with the Thanh Hoa Provincial People’s Committee, the provincial Red Cross Society, and YoungOne Corporation, organized a ceremony to present relief supplies to residents of Co Lung Commune (formerly part of Ba Thuoc District).