Saigon is now officially known as Ho Chi Minh City,
honouring the founder of modern unified Vietnam. It is divided into 19 urban districts and is
a city fast becoming a huge international centre for trade and commerce. District 1, central or “Old Saigon” is a mix
of old markets, traditional streets of small manufacturers, flash hotels and
restaurants, alleyways and wide boulevards, tree-lined streets with cafes and
shops and a busy night-club scene. Notre
Dame Cathedral, the Opera House, the Reunification Palace, Bitexco Financial
Tower, the Majestic Hotel and Continental Hotel and Central Post Office are all
features of this area, highlighting the changes wrought by progress of this
modern, exciting city. The Continental
Hotel, for instance, was built in 1880 and was a favourite of the press corps
during the French War and author Graham Greene regularly stayed in room 214 and
the hotel featured in his book, “The
Quiet American”. The Bitexco Tower,
a modern financial centre of 68 floors, features a “Skydeck” on the 49th
floor which gives an amazing view over Saigon.
Some of the most significant memories we carried away were
the Reunification Palace, the War Remnants Museum, the busy Ben Thanh Market,
the Bitexco Tower and Skydeck and the open-air bar and restaurant on the top
floor of the Rex Hotel where we enjoyed the fireworks over Saigon on the
evening of the celebration day (April 30) – Independence Day – celebrating the
reunification of North and South Vietnam in 1975. We ate in some amazing restaurants and cafes,
including Nha Hang Ngon, Lemon Grass and Huong Lai, Vietnam’s version of “15”
where staff are from disadvantaged families, orphans or street-kids who receive
on-the-job training, education and a place to stay and might I say, was one of
the best experiences we had.
One morning we left on an excursion to the Cu Chi tunnels,
only 30kms from Saigon, where up to 16,000 people hid from the Americans in the
late 60s and early 70s, mostly farming families who’d been displaced by the
war. This was an area of enormous
destruction, with intense fighting and bombing, but underground, a labyrinth of
some 250km of tunnels were used to house families as well as the Viet
Cong. Constant harassment and surprise
attacks on the Americans by the Viet Cong using the tunnels and hidden
trap-doors eventually led to the Americans using their enormous fire-power to
leave the district one of the “most devastated areas in the history of
warfare”. Two sections of the tunnels
have been opened to tour groups (although somewhat enlarged from the original
versions) and one wonders how people, even those as small as the Vietnamese,
could live in such confined spaces for weeks and months at a time.
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Street cafes - no permit required |
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Lots of motor scooters, but wide boulevards |
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Garbage collection |
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Beautiful parks in the city |
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Ho Chi Minh statue |
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The Opera House |
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Hotel Continental - made famous by Graham Greene |
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Street market - very fresh food and amazingly, no odours |
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View of old Saigon from the Skydeck |
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Inside the Post Office - lovely old building |
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Washing the family dog |
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Mobile Patisserie |
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Reunification Palace |
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The centre of old Saigon - roundabout with market in foreground |