Hanoi (VNA) – Some Vietnamese men have devoted themselves to helping their peers become educated as they are well aware of the opportunities that education offers for anyone 🧜to improve t🅺heir knowledge and achieve their desires.
Retired teacher continues to write future
“Illiteracy is not a problem of the past as many people think but remains a pressing issue for Vietnam today, especially in considering that the country is integrating internationally,” said 89-year-old Nguyen Thin Xuan, head of the UNESCO Illiteracy Fighters Club. Born in Dong Hoa commune, Dong Son district, the central province of Thanh Hoa, Xuan has spent nearly 40 years fighting illiteracy, beginning in 1943 when he joined the national language dissemination drive. After his retirement, the teacher and other officials, who were involved in the “mass education” campaign, established the UNESCO Illiteracy Fighters Club. The “mass education” campaign was initiated by the Provisional Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam on September 8, 1945. With members ranging in age from 70 to more than 100, the club aims to eradicate illiteracy and raise intellectual standards in non-traditional ways, he said. “Because of our old age, we can’t reach illiterate persons the same way we did 71 years ago, so we use our experience in tackling illiteracy and give our opinions on education,” said the teacher.Man devotes youth to library revolution
41-year-old Nguyen Quang Thach initiated the “Books for rural areas of Vietnam” programme, which has become the first Vietnamese programme to receive the UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize. The prize, which consists of two awards, recognises the work of governments, governmental agencies, and NGOs in the fight against illiteracy. It is named in honour of King Sejong, who created the native Korean alphabet ‘Hangul’ more than 500 years ago. Thach’s programme forms part of a campaign aiming to establish reading habits in rural areas by setting up libraries, helping improve the general knowledge of rural people. Born into a family of teachers in the central province of Ha Tinh, Thach has had access to books since his childhood. The man has spent 20 years studying library designs and applying library models with his first three libraries set up in 2007 in the northern province of Thai Binh. In 2010, he founded the Centre for Knowledge Assistance and Community Development and began a 1,750 kilometre tour from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City to raise funds for the programme. To date, more than 9,000 small libraries have been set up in 26 provinces nationwide. The program is expected to be replicated in other localities to bring books to as many as 20 million people in rural areas by 2020.
VNA