Vietnamese Family Life

Vietnamese Family Life

  • Submitted By: phamha
  • Date Submitted: 11/16/2008 8:08 PM
  • Category: Social Issues
  • Words: 395
  • Page: 2
  • Views: 2664

Vietnamese life is profoundly influenced by ancestor worship.
Special reverence was accorded a family's ancestors. This practice, known as the family cult or cult of the ancestors, derived from the belief that after death the spirits of the departed continued to influence the world of the living.
Special reverence was accorded a family's ancestors. This practice, known as the family cult or cult of the ancestors, derived from the belief that after death the spirits of the departed continued to influence the world of the living.
I have heard that: The soul was believed to become restless and likely to exert an unfavorable influence on the living, unless it was venerated in the expected manner
How about marriage and some ceremonies?
Marriage and family are very important in Vietnam. In the countryside, parents often arrange marriages; divorce remains uncommon, though is more frequent in cities. Members of the same household lived together, worked together, and gathered together.

For ex: marriages, funerals, Tet (lunar New Year) celebrations, and rituals marking the anniversary of an ancestor's Vietnamese life is profoundly influenced by ancestor worship.
death.
That’s right.

In traditional Vietnamese families, roles are rigid. The man of the house is primarily responsible for the family's economic well-being and takes pride in his role as provider. Women are expected to submit to their husbands or to their eldest sons when widowed, and girls to their fathers. Older children help to look after younger siblings. Discipline is viewed as a parental duty, and spanking is common once children are past early childhood.
The woman." She looks after her in-laws as well as her parents, husband and children. In rural areas, women also do much agricultural work. Vietnamese women live by the "four virtues": hard work, beauty, refined speech and excellent conduct.

The extended family rather than the nuclear one was the dominant family structure, often...

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