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Friday - March 25, 2011 01:02
In the program “Sharing with Japanese friends” on March 23, 2011, 10,000 paper cranes praying for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami disaster were presented to Japanese friends through the representative Mr. Takeji Yoshikawa, Director of the Vietnam - Japan Cultural Exchange Center.
In the program “Sharing with Japanese friends” on March 23, 2011, 10,000 paper cranes praying for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami disaster were presented to Japanese friends through the representative Mr. Takeji Yoshikawa, Director of the Vietnam - Japan Cultural Exchange Center.
The paper cranes - a symbol of peace and hope in Eastern culture - sent by the staff and students of the University of Social Sciences and Humanities to the Japanese people with sincere concern and deep sympathy for the pain and loss that the Japanese people are suffering due to the consequences of natural disasters. "Sharing with Japanese Friends" is not only a message of friendship, sharing and sympathy from the Vietnamese people to the Japanese people who are suffering from pain and loss, but also an activity imbued with the values of school humanity, with profound educational significance for students.
Some pictures of the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan
Continue to develop human values
Immediately after this event, USSH reporter had a short interview with Dr. Nguyen Quang Lieu - Head of the School's Political and Student Affairs Department.Dear Dr. Nguyen Quang Lieu, as the head of the organizing committee, what is your opinion about the feelings of the school's staff and students when participating in this program?Through each paper fold with many meticulous details, each crane appears on the hands of the young people, representing the words they want to say from their hearts to send to their Japanese friends who are suffering many losses and pains. I believe that through this program, each student has more or less deep emotions when they directly make those paper cranes, and the Japanese friends, even though they are far away, will also feel that. The program Sharing with Japanese friends comes from the earnest wish of many staff and students in the School to express sympathy, share, and gratitude to Japanese friends. Thereby contributing to the development of humanistic values that any student of social sciences and humanities needs to understand.So, according to you, how should students understand and demonstrate humanistic values?Students need to see that they do not only go to school to acquire knowledge but also to cultivate compassion, love for humanity, a sense of responsibility to share and help those in more difficult circumstances than themselves in society.As Head of the Department of Politics and Student Affairs, can you tell us what specific plans the school will have to develop humanistic values in schools, sir?In the coming time, to develop the humanistic values of the school, the school will continue to organize many meaningful activities to educate personality and create deep empathy among students and the surrounding community. With a wish that the years in the classroom will be a memorable time for each student, so that when they graduate, they will become people who are not only highly qualified, but also have a heart that is not indifferent.