Thai ethnic festival recognised as national intangible cultural heritage
The Xang Khan festival of Thai ethnic group in the central province of Nghe An has been recognised as a national intangible cultural heritage element.
A ritual at the Xang Khan festival
The provincial People’s Committee held a spring festival and ceremony to announce the recognition in Que Phong district on February 3.
Vice Chairman of the committee Le Minh Thong said the festival is a unique religious festival of Thai ethnic people in the western region of Nghe An province, including Que Phong, Quy Chau, Quy Hop, Tuong Duong, Ky Son, Con Cuong, and Nghia Dan districts, which needs further preservation and promotion.
The festival means to remind people to do good things for themselves, families and the community.
Xang Khan was the second festival of minority ethnic groups in Nghe An to be recognised as national intangible cultural heritage, after Chin Gian (Nine Compartments) Temple Festival – which aims to pay homage to ancestors and pray for good crops.
At the festival, locals and tourists had an opportunity to enjoy a show of traditional costumes of ethnic groups, gong performances, dances and folk games./.
VNF/VNA
Recommended

Art Program Spreads Message of Peace Worldwide

Look Forward to New Developments in Vietnam - US Relations

She Feeds the World: 8,000 Individuals Adopt More Sustainable Agricultural Practices

Over 200 Valuable Documents Displayed at 'Mountains and Rivers Connected One Strip' Exhibition

Latin American News Agency Prensa Latina Shares Story of Vietnamese Veteran’s 1,200km Journey Back to Former Battlefield

GNI Contributes to Spreading the Joy of Reading to Students

Japan, Vietnam To Boost Cooperation in Parliament Level
