Vietnam People
Although there are as many as 60 different groups of people living in Vietnam, the majority of the population are the Viet people.
Of the 78 million people living in the country, 85 percent are what we
refer to as Vietnamese. They live primarily in the lowlands of Vietnam.
Three-quarters of the population of Vietnam live in rural villages. A
vast majority of the citizens are rice farmers, and live in the
lowlands where there is fertile, easily irrigated soil. Where the
ancestors of the Viet people came from is not completely known. They
were probably farmers that moved gradually into the northern part of
Vietnam from China, and slowly moved south, pushing other native people
like the Champa out or up into the mountains as they migrated along the
coast.
One of the larger minority groups in Vietnam are the
Chinese. They immigrated to the lowlands of Vietnam during the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Before the war between North and
South Vietnam, they were involved in foreign and rice trade, and
remained somewhat independent from the Vietnamese people. Later,
however; new laws and regulations forced most to abandon their ways of
life, and many fled the country.
Two other minorities living in
the lowlands include the Cham and the Khmer. The Cham are descendants
of the Champa kingdom that existed along the central coast for
thousands of years. Now there are only about 50,000 of their people
left living as fishermen and farmers in scattered villages along the
coast. The Khmer, of Cambodian decent, live and have lived for a long
time in the swampy Mekong Delta, south of Ho Chi Minh City. They are
more numerous than the Cham people.
The other residents of
Vietnam live in the mountainous regions of the country. They, as a
group, are commonly called the Montagnards. In the northern mountains,
along the Chinese border, live tribes that have migrated there in the
last several centuries. Some of the more common of these include the
Tai, Nung, Meo, Yao, Muong, and the Tay. The Tay are by far the most
numerous of the northern people. To the south, in the central
highlands, are the Rhade and the Jarai peoples. They are descendants of
nomads who came to the central coast in the third or second millennia
BC, and have since been pushed up into the highlands. Now they live
mainly by slash and burn agriculture. For centuries, the mountain
people lived in isolation and were suspicious of lowlanders. They
maintained only limited communication and trade with the Vietnamese. In
the last fifty or so years, the Vietnamese have tried both peacefully
and forcefully to integrate them into their society, and they have
found themselves in the middle of several wars. Now the Vietnamese
government is implementing programs to improve and develop communities,
bring lowland Vietnamese people into the mountains, and educate the
children of these Montagnards, while still allowing them to maintain
their heritage.
Vietnam is the 13th most populous country in the
world. Their official language, Vietnamese is spoken throughout the
country, but dialects vary between the north, south, and center.
English is common in larger cities and is taught in schools, and French
is also spoken in various parts of the country. Vietnam has an 88
percent literacy rate. Their national script is called Quoc Ngu. It was
introduced by European colonists, and utilizes the Roman alphabet (the
alphabet used for English).
The Vietnamese people, and the many
minority groups living with them have created a unique culture and form
of society. They have held onto their heritage and pride throughout
countless struggles and wars, and are still striving to integrate and
unite all parts and people of their incredible country.