Hanoi streets turn red in celebration of liberation day
These days, the streets and alleys of Hanoi are flooded with red flags to celebrate the 69th anniversary of the liberation of the capital.
Do Hong Phan, 90, tearfully looked at the photos of herself and her friends fighting in Hanoi's patriotic student movement in the 1950s. Many memories flashed through her mind: exciting and heroic moments, hardships and challenges, as well as horrifying tortures by the enemy, which could not break the unyielding determination of Hanoi's youth to fight for the nation's freedom.
I met Do Hong Phan on a crisp autumn morning at an exhibition by Hoa Lo Prison Relics on the 69th anniversary of the Capital Liberation Day (October 10, 1954) about the vibrant patriotic youth movement. The wind blew through the jail's corridor with infinite prison cells. Phan fondled the stone walls of the cell where she had once been locked up as an activist in the patriotic student movement. Born in 1933, Phan was the former Director of the Department of International Cooperation of the Ministry of Irrigation (now the Department of Irrigation, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development), a veteran having served the Vietnamese Communist Party for 70 years. Recalling her early days in the revolutionary movement, from late 1949 to early 1950, when she was a female student at Chu Van An High School, Phan said: "Those were the most exciting days of my life. At 16-17, we fought in student resistance movements, encouraging each other to overcome difficulties and challenges." Hanoi was then occupied by the French colonialists. At that time, Chu Van An was an all-girls school, and most were drawn into the movement, each with a specific task. The excitement and enthusiasm of youth swept them all along. In the course of her activities, Hong Phan gained additional knowledge about the Party and the proletarian movement. In early June 1950, Hong Phan was informed that she was qualified to be a member of the Party. "The Party initiation ceremony was held at Nguyen Thi Dan's warehouse, which is the base of the resistance women at Dong Xuan market. The warehouse was filled with bales of cloth. We had to squeeze between the bale boxes deep inside to find a small space, enough for a small table, a few chairs, the Party's flag on the wall, and a matchbox-sized photo of President Ho Chi Minh. That day, two people were admitted to the Party: me and my friend Doan Thi Thuc Anh," Phan recalled. In a sacred moment, Hong Phan shuddered with indescribable honor and pride. Of all the things her superiors told her, the advice she remembered most was: "In wartime, it is very likely that you will be captured and tortured by the enemy, but as a Party member, you must keep your composure and be ready to overcome all tribulations and challenges." This advice guided Hong Phan's later revolutionary activities.
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These days, the streets and alleys of Hanoi are flooded with red flags to celebrate the 69th anniversary of the liberation of the capital.
The exhibition aims to remind the present generation of the difficulties and sacrifices of the revolutionary fighters and people for the liberation of capital and the victory of the long war of resistance against the French.
The people of Hanoi will forever remember the day when the city was utterly free from invaders.
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