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[Video] Sharing with Japanese friends

Friday - March 25, 2011 12:02 PM
During the "Sharing with Our Japanese Friends" program on March 23, 2011, 10,000 paper cranes, offered as prayers for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami disaster, were sent to our Japanese friends through Mr. Takeji Yoshikawa, Director of the Vietnam-Japan Cultural Exchange Center.
During the "Sharing with Our Japanese Friends" program on March 23, 2011, 10,000 paper cranes, offered as prayers for the victims of the earthquake and tsunami disaster, were sent to our Japanese friends through Mr. Takeji Yoshikawa, Director of the Vietnam-Japan Cultural Exchange Center. The paper cranes – symbols of peace and hope in Eastern culture – created by faculty and students of the University of Social Sciences and Humanities, were sent to the Japanese people with sincere concern and deep sympathy for the pain and loss they are suffering as a result of the natural disaster. "Sharing with Our Japanese Friends" is not only a message of friendship, sharing, and empathy from the Vietnamese people to the Japanese people who are enduring suffering and loss, but also an activity with profound humanistic values ​​and significant educational value for students.

Some images of the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan.

Continue to develop humanistic values.

Immediately after this event, a USSH reporter conducted a brief interview with Dr. Nguyen Quang Lieu, Head of the Political and Student Affairs Department of the University.Dr. Nguyen Quang Lieu, as the head of the organizing committee, what are your observations regarding the sentiments of the faculty and students participating in this program?Through each meticulously folded piece of paper, each crane emerges in the hands of the young people, conveying their heartfelt messages to their Japanese friends who are suffering great loss and pain. I believe that through this program, each student will experience profound emotions as they directly create these paper cranes, and the Japanese students, even from afar, will feel the same. The "Sharing with Our Japanese Friends" program stems from the heartfelt desire of many faculty and students in the University to express their empathy, sharing, and gratitude to their Japanese friends. Through this, it contributes to the development of humanistic values ​​that any student in the social sciences and humanities should understand.So, according to the professor, how should students today understand and demonstrate humanistic values?Students need to understand that they are not only going to school to acquire knowledge, but also to cultivate compassion, love for humanity, and a sense of responsibility to share and help those less fortunate in society.As the Head of the Political and Student Affairs Department, could you please tell us what specific plans the university has to develop humanistic values ​​in the school, Dr.?In the future, to develop humanistic values ​​in the school, the university will continue to organize many meaningful activities that educate character and create deep empathy among students and the surrounding community. With the hope that the years spent on campus will be memorable for each student, so that when they graduate they will become individuals who are not only highly skilled professionally but also possess compassionate hearts.

Nguyen Hang (perform)

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