Czech expatriates always look to their roots

Away from home in May, struggling to make a living in the country, the Vietnamese community in the Czech Republic has always turned to their homeland and roots with pride and gratitude.

The career journey of the first generation of Vietnamese people

According to Prague Radio, with nearly 31,500 people, the Vietnamese community is currently the third largest minority in the Czech Republic, after the Slovaks and Ukrainians. Desiring to create a good life for their families, Vietnamese immigrants to the Czech Republic worked hard 15 hours a day, starting from early morning until late at night. Vu Nhi Linh (23 years old), studying journalism at Charles University in Prague, said she can feel the hardships of her parents through the austere lines on her face.

“Our parents want to give us the best education, they are trying to give us a better future, better opportunities and a better life than they have,” Linh said.

Linh was born and raised in the Czech Republic. In addition to her Vietnamese name, she has a Czech name, Hana. Linh said: Her parents came to the Czech Republic in the late 80s of the twentieth century. Linh’s father’s first job was working on a cow farm, then he moved to work in Skoda factory in Pilsen because in Vietnam he studied Master of technology. Linh’s mother came here later, they met and got married in the Czech Republic. At first, she worked as a seamstress, and a few years later turned to sales.

“My mother went to the Czech Republic with a group of about 20 people. My mother didn’t talk much about those days, but I think she was very lonely because she didn’t know the language and the Vietnamese community was not as big as it is now,” Linh said.

Mr. Ngo Van Hung and Ms. Vu Nhi Linh manage Ngo restaurant in Prague, Czech Republic.

Like Linh, Ngo Van Hung’s parents (27 years old) also went to the Czech Republic under the form of a labor cooperation between the two governments in the late 1980s when Hung was only three years old. The Hung brothers live in Vietnam with their grandparents. At the age of 13, Hung’s parents brought him to open a restaurant. Up to now, Hung has been in the Czech Republic for nearly 15 years.

Hung’s mother often told him that: In the early days of coming to the Czech Republic, Vietnamese people had no choice but to work in factories or trade along the German-Austrian border. At that time, Hung’s mother and her companions did not know German. To sell goods, they only learn the numbers as the capital of the business. When they go to the doctor, they also use body language, use their hands to show the doctor where they hurt. After that, Hung’s mother started to learn Czech, life got easier from then on and she was able to help her countrymen understand more about Czech culture.

Proud and grateful to the roots

With demanding jobs, some Vietnamese parents cannot stay at home with their children and have to hire nannies to look after their children. Many children can only see and play with their parents on weekends. Unwittingly, nannies play an important role in connecting Vietnamese children with the local culture by teaching them about the Czech language, cuisine and traditions.

Linh was also sent by her parents to a Czech woman to look after. But over time, she followed her mother to sell more. Linh said that some people liken the second generation of Vietnamese in the Czech Republic to a banana: the outside is yellow but the inside is white. Linh does not completely agree with such a view: “I agree that I have yellow skin on the outside, but inside I am not completely white but also partly Vietnamese.”

Czech expatriates always look to their roots
In Prague, the Czech capital, there are many restaurants imbued with Vietnamese cultural identity.

Linh is proud of her “dual identity” and explains that: “I have had the opportunity to interact with two cultures, Czech culture and Vietnamese culture, and I am richer than friends with only one culture. “.

As for Hung, he feels that he is Vietnamese with a little bit of Czech culture. Talking about the future of Vietnamese in the Czech Republic, both Hung and Linh are very optimistic as more and more young Vietnamese succeed in the Czech Republic and do not forget that they are Vietnamese.

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