25
Social Customs
25
Social Customs and Beliefs
In the past, and even today, a traditional Vietnamese person
would comply with most or all of the following traditions
and precepts:
The family is the basis of society, not
the individual.
Three to four generations often live together in one home.
The family is patriarchal. Within the family, the wife deals
with all household matters, and the husband deals with the
outside world.
Elderly parents are supported by married or unmarried children
until death.
Names are written in the order of Family name, Middle name
and Given name, e.g., Nguyen Van Trung. The family name
is placed first to emphasise a person's heritage.
Children
live with their parents until marriage. Males usually marry
between the ages of 20 and 30, and females between the ages
of 18 and 25.
Marriages must be approved by the parents of both the male
and female, regardless of age.
Apart from some Christians, the celebration of marriage
takes place in the home of one of the marriage partners
or a hotel, not in a church or temple.
Legally, women keep their own names after marriage.
After marriage, the wife lives with her husband's family.
She is considered to ‘belong’ to her husband's family and
expected to do the housework under the direction of her
mother-in-law.
Before 1959, Vietnamese men could have several wives (polygamy)
ranked according to responsibility. Thereafter, only one
spouse remained married to the husband and second or subsequent
marriages were dissolved.
When a child is born, it is considered one year old.
The eldest son has a duty to perform ancestor worship at
home.
Brothers and sisters do not touch or kiss one another.
If a parent dies, the children customarily wait three years
before marrying.
If a wife dies, the husband must wait one year before remarrying.
If a sibling dies, the other siblings must wait one year
before marrying.
To show respect, Vietnamese people bow their heads before
a superior or aged person.
While conversing, Vietnamese people don’t look steadily
at a respected person's eyes.
Women do not shake hands with each other or with men.
Women do not smoke in public.
Vietnamese never touch another's head. Only the elderly
can touch the head of a young child.
Persons of the same sex may hold hands in public and/or
sleep in the same bed without public derision.
Incest is punished by law and is strongly resented by society.
The legal concept of equality between the sexes is the same
as in Western countries, but socially, men are still considered
superior to women.