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Thanh Nien
Editor-in-Chief: Nguyen Cong Khe
248 Cong Quynh St . , Distr. 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Tel: 84 8 8 394 046
Fax: 84 8 8 322 025

Thanh Nien is the tribune of Vietnam’s Youth Association

Publication permit No. 14/GP-BC, granted by Press Department, Vietnam Ministry of Culture and Information.
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Warding off plague, pestilence and parasites
.
Held on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month, the festival of Tet Doan Ngo, also known as Doan Duong Tet or "The Insect-Killing Festival," is intended to ward off sickness and evil.

The festival is also observed in China and corresponds to the summer solstice, which is thought to be an unhealthy time of the year, a time when plague stalks the land.

As the first step in countering the threat, families put out offerings of fruit, sticky rice, cakes and liquor before throwing the huge party.

Some people pray that plague will spare them, then partake of nhong, the larvae of the silkworm before throwing a big party

This is the time of year people believe intestinal worms will emerge and so it is the ideal time to eradicate them by eating green fruit and drinking com ruou (fermented glutinous rice wine).

Another popular food for Tet Doan Ngo is banh u tro, a kind of cake made of glutinous rice flour dipped in lye and wrapped in bamboo leaves.

The cakes can be bought usually in lots of one dozen, with or without, best eaten with sugar.

Taking a therapeutic shower and rubbing the body with mint leaves is another common practice during this time, as is wearing silver bracelets to ward off evil spirits.

So is going into the countryside and picking medicinal herbs to dry and store for later use against parasitic diseases.

People say that many wild herbs make good medicine if gathered in the two hours following noon.

Afterwards they are dried in the sun and used anytime by making tea. The most popular are absinthe leaves, Eugenia and dewberry.

In many regions, people usually buy a bundle of different plants and hang it in front of the doors of their houses, believing it will ward off evil spirits during the rest of the year.

Tet Doan Ngo is also a day for praying that insects won't destroy the crops. In the countryside there is a strong belief that every tree embodies a spirit, so on this special day they make supplication to these spirits that the crops will thrive and yield an abundant harvest.

Usually the son will climb to the top of a tree and pretend to be an oracle, engaging in a theatrical dialogue with his father, who wields a huge knife and makes an incision in the bark, threatening the spirit with some phrase like "If you don't give me a good crop, I will cut you down".

Many believe that cutting a tree exactly at noon will make the next harvest better than the preceding one.

If the farmers didn't receive a good crop the previous year, then they revise the rituals and try again.

Compiled by Thu Thuy

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