JavaScript is off. Please enable to view full site.

Gen Giap photos reflect comradeship

Gen Giap photos reflect comradeship

Thursday, August 23, 2012, 15:37 GMT+7

The close relationship between Gen Vo Nguyen Giap and veterans is portrayed by photographer Nguyen Trong Nghi in an exhibition which opened in the capital yesterday.

Entitled General Vo Nguyen Giap with Veterans, the exhibition of 102 photos selected from a collection of 500, captures handshakes, hugs, smiles and meetings between the general and members of the armed forces.

"I organised the exhibition as a gift to the General for his 102nd birthday which falls on August 25," said Nghi, also a veteran.

"The photos also help me express respect to my comrades throughout the country," he said.

After selecting the photos, Nghi spent more than three months visiting the people in the photos to record the circumstances of their meetings with Giap for the exhibition.

Nghi was born in 1943 in the northern province of Hung Yen. He joined the army in 1962 and fought on many battlefields across the country. After being wounded and infected by Agent Orange he gained skills in photography and became a photojournalist.

The exhibition will run until Aug. 28 at Exhibition House, 93 Dinh Tien Hoang Street, Hanoi.

VNA

More

Read more

;

VIDEOS

‘Taste of Australia’ gala dinner held in Ho Chi Minh City after 2-year hiatus

Taste of Australia Gala Reception has returned to the Park Hyatt Hotel in Ho Chi Minh City's District 1 after a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Vietnamese woman gives unconditional love to hundreds of adopted children

Despite her own immense hardship, she has taken in and cared for hundreds of orphans over the past three decades.

Latest news

Honda and Nissan start merger talks in historic pivot

Honda and Nissan have started talks toward a potential merger, they said on Monday, a historic pivot for Japan's auto industry that underlines the threat Chinese EV makers now pose to some of the world's best known car makers

Trump threatens to retake control of Panama Canal

President-elect Donald Trump threatened to reassert U.S. control over the Panama Canal on Sunday, accusing Panama of charging excessive rates to use the Central American passage and drawing a sharp rebuke from Panamanian President Jose Raul Mulino