|
Combining
Confucianism with ancestor worship 
The original Lac Viet inhabitants of Vietnam were
tribal people living in large clans. The patriarchal
clan structure, with deference toward elders and filial
piety as basic virtues, was the adhesive that bound
together a closely-knit, consanguineous community.
The feudal nature of the clans harmonised with both
Chinese Confucianism and ancestor worship.
Confucianism can be summarised
as a set of beliefs that, for the average Vietnamese,
creates a sense of being a unit in a collective entity
rather than a distinct individual. The effect is that
the will and interest of the group always takes precedence
over the wishes of an individual or couple. The result
is a people who have no concept of privacy, or of
having one’s ‘own space’.
Ancestor worship extended the
concept of family beyond mere kinship by linking three
or four living generations to two or three generations
of family members who had died and become spirits.
A belief that good or bad behaviour by ancestors during
life had a positive or negative effect upon the fortunes
of the succeeding generations further extended the
family unit.
In a practical sense, these
two influences merged the interests of individuals
into a communal society in which all members were
jointly responsible for the each other’s behaviour,
and paved the way for the introduction of communism
into Vietnam.
The seed bed
of Communism
Communism first entered Vietnam early in the last
century in the coalfields of Ha Long Bay. The appalling
workplace conditions and the brutality of the French
colonialists created a fertile seedbed for radical
ideas, and the theories of Marx and Lenin provided
a philosophic rationale. Unlike the people of the
USSR and its satellites, the Vietnamese were already
communalised – Marxist-Leninism was adopted
as an organising framework for revolution. The underlying
tenets of communism: an emphasis upon ends rather
than means, collective action and responsibility,
discipline and sacrifice for the greater good: all
these and more were part of everyday life, instilled
through Confucianism and, to a lesser extent, ancestor
worship.
The resilient strength
of Vietnamese communalism meant that communism was
easily absorbed into the collective consciousness
of the Vietnamese people, and transformed into something
that fitted their requirements rather than being a
vehicle to reconstruct society.
The communalist
instinct
Today, doi moi has created what appears to be a classic
capitalist market economy, so much so that several
western commentators have, according to their political
stance, either condemned or hailed what they believe
to be the demise of ‘communism’ in Vietnam.
In so doing, they betray an inadequate understanding
of the country’s history and culture. Apart
from a disastrous flirtation with Stalinist collectivisation
after the victory over the US, the ideology of communism
has always taken second place to the Vietnamese communal
instinct. The organising principles of communism have
served Vietnam well, and still do, but the purpose
is to achieve a communally-organised society, not
a centralised monolith.
The greater
community
Most of the socialist ‘litmus test’ icons
– free health, free education, subsidised food
and transport, generous social benefits, for example
- are noticeably absent in Vietnam. Absent, but not
abandoned! For the Vietnamese, the ‘community’
is not just the here and now people and the Diaspora,
but also the ancestors. For us, doi moi is principally
a vehicle to strengthen our community, not to create
wealth. We notice that people in the west are generally
willing to make sacrifices to protect the weaker members
of their national and local communities, but less
so for future generations. In Vietnam, the future
generations are part of our extended families and
communities. During the last century, we fought to
secure a better life for our children, not an ideology.
The privations of doi moi are for the same purpose.
Home
page | About
us | Destinations
| Sample
Tours | Practical
things | Enquiry
form

©
2002 Haivenu Co.,Ltd. All rights reserved. Website
Promoted
and Hosted
by iweb4u
Ltd
.
|