The Vietnamese clearly know how to throw a good party and if the attention to detail they are putting into the rehearsals is anything to go by, the event itself should be spectacular. Mind you, that is if there is anyone left in Saigon apart from the Communist Party faithful, to enjoy the show. Many workers take advantage of the public holiday to visit relatives outside the city.
April 30 is Reunification Day in Vietnam. It was at 10.30 in the morning on that day in 1975 that a tank from the North Vietnamese army bulldozed
down the gates of the home and work place of the President of South Vietnam, effectively ending the Vietnamese War, or the Resistance War against America as it is known locally. By July of the following year, Vietnam was once again a single unified country.
Since then the last day in April has been a public holiday – one of the 18 that the Vietnamese enjoy over the course of the year. It is a day when the emphasis moves away from the capital city of Hanoi, south to Saigon or Ho Chi Minh City as it was renamed in 1976. This year on the 40th Anniversary, the authorities are pulling out all the stops and rehearsals began nearly two weeks before the big day. The road in front of the Reunification Palace has been closed and staging ready to hold thousands has been erected. Every morning and evening (even the Vietnamese respect the heat in the middle of the day) hundreds of performers sit around waiting for their turn to rehearse. Music, blaring from dozens of loudspeakers starts, stops and starts again as the the Vietnamese equivalent of Danny Boyle choreographers the action. Soldiers march on cue and wave flags, golden floats as yet bereft of passengers or bunting are towed up and down by cars yet to be transformed into dragons or other mythical beasts. With heads fifteen feet above the ground, stilt walkers stride past, apparently oblivious to the organised chaos taking place below them.
The attention to detail is impressive as are the rows of lights that are strung between lamp posts along the roads leading to Reunification Square, the focus of the celebrations. Heaven only knows how much it is all going to cost. Still the Vietnamese have been quick to follow their communist neighbours China in embracing capitalism with Dunkin Donuts, only recently arrived in the country, the proud sponsors of the light show!



















