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- Bắc Ninh: Hàng ngàn người về xem Hội Rước Pháo Làng Ðồng Kỵ
Hàng ngàn người từ các tỉnh lân cận và Hà Nội đã đổ về làng Ðồng Kỵ thuộc xã Ðồng Quan, Huyện Từ Sơn, tỉnh Bắc Ninh (cách Hà Nội chừng 50 km) để xem hội rước pháo truyền thống vào sáng Mùng 4 Tết.
- Baghdad: Nổ bom xe ngay khách sạn bộ trưởng, 4 người chết
- Báo "Thanh Niên" chọn chín vụ án lớn nhất Việt Nam trong năm 2003
- Bầu cử Tổng Thống Hoa Kỳ:
- Các chính phủ Á Châu đồng ý lập hệ thống theo dõi bệnh cúm gà
- Các chuyên gia thấy có tiến triển tốt trong cuộc đối đầu ở nhà tù Arizona
- Cán bộ lão thành tố cáo lãnh tụ Ðảng tham nhũng, không sửa sai
Một cán bộ cao cấp nghỉ hưu có 57 tuổi đảng lên tiếng tố cáo nhiều lãnh tụ Ðảng tham nhũng và chế độ Hà Nội làm nhiều điều sái quấy, hại dân nhưng không chịu sửa sai.
- Sáu quân nhân Phi Luật Tân bị thẩm vấn vì tố cáo Bộ Trưởng Quốc Phòng vi phạm tự do bầu cử
- Cựu Thanh Tra Kay: Tình báo Hoa Kỳ trước cuộc chiến Iraq là có lỗi lầm
- Dải Gaza: Giao chiến khiến có ít nhất chín người Palestine chết
- Dịch cúm gà xuất hiện ở Hà Nội và đã lan ra tới 31 tỉnh
- Hà Nội: Sông Hồng cạn nước trơ đáy
- Hà Sĩ Phu bị công an kiếm chuyện sau khi đi Hà Nội chữa bệnh
- Hoa Kỳ thả hơn 20 tù nhân từ nhà tù Guantanamo
- Hoa Kỳ thành lập “Văn Phòng Thông Tin Giáo Dục Hoa Kỳ” tại Sài Gòn
- Family affair
Running a thriving nail salon is an all-for-one effort in today's competitive climate.
- Baby talk
When An Mai Nguyễn couldn't find the volumes she wanted to share with her newborn son, she published them herself.
- Baby talk
When An Mai Nguyễn couldn't find the volumes she wanted to share with her newborn son, she published them herself.
- A pastry superstar
Uyên Nguyễn delights patrons of the Restaurant Guy Savoy in Las Vegas with her creations.
- A pastry superstar
Uyên Nguyễn delights patrons of the Restaurant Guy Savoy in Las Vegas with her creations.
- 10 things I wish I knew before starting college
There is plenty that people don't tell you, things I wished someone had taken me aside and talked about my freshman year.
- 10 things I wish I knew before starting college
There is plenty that people don't tell you, things I wished someone had taken me aside and talked about my freshman year.
- Transforming new soil
Local dignitaries take part in the groundbreaking of the Vietnamese Heritage Garden in History Park in San Jose.
- Transforming new soil
Local dignitaries take part in the groundbreaking of the Vietnamese Heritage Garden in History Park in San Jose.
- Mind over matter
The practice of yoga helps with body, mind and intellect to meet as one.
- Mind over matter
The practice of yoga helps with body, mind and intellect to meet as one.
- My big fat Greek nightmare
This writer shares with us what it's like to fly in the middle of a terror crisis and survive.
- My big fat Greek nightmare
This writer shares with us what it's like to fly in the middle of a terror crisis and survive.
- Crashed: 10 weddings in 5 months
They came flying in this past spring. Sharp, accurate, and dangerous like ninja stars. Wedding invitations.
- Crashed: 10 weddings in 5 months
They came flying in this past spring. Sharp, accurate, and dangerous like ninja stars. Wedding invitations.
- Pictures tell the story
Hundreds of youngsters enter an art contest, painting images of a traditional holiday.
- Pictures tell the story
Hundreds of youngsters enter an art contest, painting images of a traditional holiday.
- Sister act
Gymnasts Christine and Catherine Nguyễn balance training, school and the beam in their quest to be among the best.
- Sister act
Gymnasts Christine and Catherine Nguyễn balance training, school and the beam in their quest to be among the best.
- An emerging force
Asian Americans now make up 12 percent of those eligible to vote in California. Vietnamese Americans are likely to play a prominent role in the November elections.
- An emerging force
Asian Americans now make up 12 percent of those eligible to vote in California. Vietnamese Americans are likely to play a prominent role in the November elections.
- Recording the fast life
Young Vietnamese American producer documents Asian American youth culture.
- Recording the fast life
Young Vietnamese American producer documents Asian American youth culture.
- The perfect, yet problematic, petite
Smaller women long have fought the odds in trying to find just the right fit. Manufacturers slowly are starting to take notice.
- The perfect, yet problematic, petite
Smaller women long have fought the odds in trying to find just the right fit. Manufacturers slowly are starting to take notice.
- Closing the gap
After seven days in Mexico City, this Vietnamese American begins a greater understanding of the Mexican Americans who are his neighbors.
- Closing the gap
After seven days in Mexico City, this Vietnamese American begins a greater understanding of the Mexican Americans who are his neighbors.
- Finding his way
Sabastian Huỳnh spent his early years trying to figure out where he belonged. Now, he helps others fulfill their destinies.
- Finding his way
Sabastian Huỳnh spent his early years trying to figure out where he belonged. Now, he helps others fulfill their destinies.
- In the chef's kitchen
On this day of feasting, Andrea Nguyễn shares her recipes and thoughts on food in her new cookbook.
- Bà Anna Nguyễn Thị Tịnh
- Không quân Joseph Bạch Ngọc Hòa
- Cụ Bà Bùi Tình
- Cựu SVSQ Cao Đức Thuần và Nguyễn Phước Hải
- Bạn Bạch Ngọc Hòa
- Ông Gioan Bosco Nguyễn Thượng Hiệp (Cảm Tạ)
- “The Oprah Winfrey Show” sẽ chấm dứt năm 2011
- Mùa Từ Thiện
Nói trắng ra là cộng đồng chúng ta vẫn còn nghèo, mà một phần lớn của cái nghèo đó là vì chúng ta đã và hiện vẫn còn đang “ăn cơm nhà” ở Hoa Kỳ, nhưng làm chuyện “vác ngà voi” ở Việt Nam.
- Mùa Từ Thiện
Nói trắng ra là cộng đồng chúng ta vẫn còn nghèo, mà một phần lớn của cái nghèo đó là vì chúng ta đã và hiện vẫn còn đang “ăn cơm nhà” ở Hoa Kỳ, nhưng làm chuyện “vác ngà voi” ở Việt Nam.
- Red Cross collecting holiday mail for troops
The American Red Cross Orange County Chapter is now collecting mail to send to the armed forces for Thanksgiving and Holiday season 2009. The Red Cross is attempting to put mail in the hands of military personnel and their families to thank them for their service.
- Supermodel search under way
Ford Models is looking for its next supermodel.
- High school counselor gets award
Huy Trần, a counselor at La Quinta High School in the Garden Grove Unified School District, is a recipient of the Yale University "Educator Award" for 2009.
- Diabetes attacking the very young in Việt Nam, experts warn
The incidence of diabetes among very young people in Việt Nam has increased significantly of late, and the country is among those with the fastest-growing rate of patients, an expert says.
- Fish sauce apparently not what it used to be
Around 90 percent of Phú Quốc fish sauce sold both locally and overseas is fake and of poor quality, the island’s fish sauce association said Sunday.
- Flight attendants accused of stealing passenger’s money
Việt Nam Airlines has suspended three flight attendants for allegedly stealing money from a passenger on a Sunday morning flight, the national carrier announced later the same day.
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HÀ N?I — It happened soon after he heard the earth-shattering news that he was HIV-positive. When Kiên Nguy?n entered one of his classes at the Hà N?i Fine Arts University, all of his classmates got up and walked out.
That was only the beginning of a downhill slide that included drugs and attempted suicide. It was years before he finally began to heal and become what he is today: one of the few public faces of HIV in a country where the number of people with the disease is on the rise and the stigma associated with it remains high.
Kiên Nguy?n, 30, contracted HIV in 1995 from his then-girlfriend. When he went to the hospital to get the test results, his father came with him. The son, too afraid to look at the sheet of paper himself, asked his parent to do it. It said positive.
“We didn’t know much about HIV then and there wasn’t much information,” Nguy?n remembered. “At the time I felt sad; I knew there was no cure.”
Vietnamese law now protects the identities of those with HIV/AIDS, but back then there were no such regulations. The hospital told the local People’s Committee that Nguy?n had HIV, and from there rumors spread in the neighborhood.
“After that when I knew more about HIV I was shocked because I realized there was a huge stigma,” Nguy?n said.
He still didn’t know just how huge, however, until his classmates filed out. Then the school expelled Nguy?n for a year. His neighbors believed his family had become a danger to the community. His father was torn; he wanted to stand by his son, but he was also constrained by society’s fears of HIV and AIDS. So he sent his child to live alone on a beach in Thanh Hóa province, 93 miles south of Hà N?i.
When his girlfriend died, Nguy?n turned to heroin to numb the pain. During these dark days he cut his wrists three times in an attempt to kill himself.
But Nguy?n, born into a family of painters, also began painting to help him deal with his grief. His artwork from that period is marked by dark shades and names like Place of Debauchery, The Cry, Unceasing Shame, and Guillotine.
One of his most emotional pieces shows a doll, symbolizing his girlfriend, falling into a dark river far below.
Painting wasn’t the only thing that boosted Nguy?n, allowing him to get back on his feet. He went to three rehab programs before returning to Hà N?i and managing, painfully, to quit drugs. In late 2003 he also joined the Lotus Scent Club, where people with HIV and AIDS meet and support each other. In 2004, Nguy?n decided it was finally time he did something about his disease instead of just succumb to it.
“I didn’t want to waste my life,” he said.
He started designing logos for the club, teaching children suffering from HIV and Agent Orange how to paint, and speaking at a drug abuse treatment center.
But there was one other way he fought the disease which required far more courage. While most people afflicted with HIV and AIDS in Vi?t Nam live anonymously, Nguy?n chose to show his face.
In November 2004, he appeared on “Friends Helping Friends,” a nationally televised program about AIDS that made waves in society.
The public began to recognize Nguy?n; some whispered that people should stay away from him, but many sympathized and respected him all the more.
Nguy?n appeared in another nationally broadcast TV program about HIV, along with a woman from H?i Phòng, to tell his story. Their message: HIV isn’t a social evil, and people with HIV are still living, working and useful, so avoid discriminating and stigmatizing them.
In December 2004 Nguy?n held his fifth exhibition, but the first one where he was open about being HIV-positive. Called “Color of Love” and hosted with another HIV-positive painter, Quang Hùng, the show’s goal was to open the public’s eyes to what it was like living with HIV/AIDS. It featured pieces from Nguy?n’s most difficult days, as well as his more recent, hopeful creations.
“I want to affirm that I will have a healthy life and contribute to society until my last breath,” Nguy?n said at the time.
In June 2005 Nguy?n launched his second exhibition about HIV, which also displayed the artwork of children living with the illness.
And this year in March he reached another milestone with his latest show, which highlighted not only his paintings, but those of his wife, who does not have HIV or AIDS.
Ngân Nguy?n, 24, had come to Hà N?i to study art with Nguy?n’s father in 2004. She met Kiên, admired him, and fell for him. She knew from the start he was HIV-positive, but unlike most Vietnamese, she was educated about the disease.
“I already had friends with HIV, so I knew about it,” Ngân said.
Kiên returned her love, but he didn’t think he’d ever commit to Ngân. When they discussed marriage, he urged her to consider the risks carefully.
She answered, “Don’t ever think I’m making a sacrifice. I love you and want to be with you the rest of my life.”
Her parents, concerned about the match, pointed out to her the disadvantages and dangers of uniting with Kiên. But when Ngân showed her determination to be with Kiên by voluntarily going to his house, her parents gave their consent to the marriage — a move which Kiên said shocked him more than when he learned he had HIV.
At his last exhibition he made another statement. He painted a dozen portraits, half of people with HIV and half of people without. And by looking at those images, he said, no one can tell who has HIV and who doesn’t.
“There’s no difference between those with HIV and those without,” he noted.
Today the artist looks healthy. His HIV infection hasn’t developed into AIDS yet, and Ngân says her husband is strong. His house is graced with his latest artwork, most of them bright and uplifting.
At the beginning of his battle with HIV, Kiên Nguy?n suffered the humiliation of having people stand up and walk out on him. But a decade later he’s proven that he’s the one rising above such ignorance and fear, and he gave his last exhibition an apt name: Stand Up from Tears. |