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T2T International Volunteering:  Over 70 Programs, in 30 Locations, in 11 Countries, on 3 Continents


Vietnam Photo
Orphanages in Vietnam
There are many orphaned children in Vietnam and lots more children with injuries from Agent Orange, the dioxene used by the American army for deforestation during the war.
Work with Street Children in Nha Trang

South East Asian Combination Stays:
Combine volunteering in Vietnam with stays in Laos, Thailand or Cambodia
Combination Stays

Vietnam Volunteer Photo Anouk, Holland:
"Unbelievable, the past three months have gone so quickly I hardly can believe my volunteering period has come to an end..."
Read Anouk's Volunteer Story

Travel to Teach: Volunteer in Vietnam

Volunteer in Vietnam"No mere metaphor is the fact that the traditional Vietnamese terms for "country" translate as "mountain and river" or simply "water"

Strung on a network of rivers between the mountains and the sea, Vietnam is a landscape of moody alpine fogs hovering over thatch-roofed villages nestled in forests of rain. Vast expanses of reflective paddy fields posturing rice stands through which gentle breezes eddy. Lacework deltas fretted with canals carrying fertile mud recently arrived from China, and boiling white beaches guarded by island sentinels.

Life forms evolved upon this land to husband the wealth of resources its nature provided. This social mirroring of the natural surroundings extended even into city life.

"Hanoi" means the "inside of the river" and the name "Saigon" may have been derived from "cay gon" which refers to the poles sunk in the alluvial mud upon which the houses were built.

Placed amongst a mosaic of lakes, Hanoi, the capital, still retains the red-tile-roofed French provincial ambience of years gone by amidst the surging urbane energy of a modern metropolis fused to a thousand-year history of Chinese cultural influence. A city to stroll in, to gawk at its market offerings, munch tropical fruits, sip delicate teas, Hanoi also has places to ponder ancient verities: the Temple of Literature, the One-Pillar Pagoda, the Lake of the Restored Sword.

Saigon, on the other hand, commercial hub of the south spun along mangrove riverbanks, threatens to become a financial lightning rod. Once an Asian Venice, its main thoroughfares are now boulevards of filled-in canals wiring between traffic rotaries to form interconnected molecules of enterprise.

From Chinese Cholon to very Vietnamese Dakao, each sector of the city sports its unique flavor, its characteristic foods, its particular pace -- all, however, displaying little school girls, office clerks, business women adorned in the traditional national dress, the "ao dai" of silk over-tunic and pantaloons, lending an air of unhurried grace to the frenetic activity.

The sights, sounds, tastes, and smells Vietnam offers may be diverse, but strung as these are between the mountains and the sea, they present a unified gestalt held together by the cultural landscape reflecting the soil upon which it is borne."

Vietnam Facts

Full Country Name:Socialist Republic of Vietnam
Located:Southeastern Asia, bordering the Gulf of Thailand, Gulf of Tonkin, and South China Sea, alongside China, Laos, and Cambodia
Area:329,560 sq km
Population: 84.5 million
People: Vietnamese 86%, Tay 1.9%, Thai 1.7%, various ethnic tribes 6%, others 4%
Language: Vietnamese (official), English, some French, Chinese, and Khmer; mountain area languages (Mon-Khmer and Malayo-Polynesian) Religion: Buddhist 9.3%, Catholic 6.7%, Hoa Hao 1.5%, Cao Dai 1.1%, Protestant 0.5%, Muslim 0.1%, none 80.8%
Literacy: age 15 and over can read and write; total population: 90.3%, male: 94%, female: 87%
Government:Communist state
Money: Vietnamese Dong (VND)
Climate:Tropical in the south; monsoonal in north with hot, rainy season (May to September) and warm, dry season (October to March)
Economic Overview:In the last 30 years Vietnam has struggled to recover from the ravages of war and the rigidity of a centrally planned economy. In 1986 the government began introducing market elements into the economy which resulted in economic growth. The GDP now stands at 8.4%. Despite this, Vietnam still remains a relatively poor country with a large percentage of the population living below the poverty level. Sights: Halong Bay, Old Quarter Hanoi, Hue, Champa Ruins, Nha Trang beaches, Mekong Delta, Reunification Palace and Museums in Saigon

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