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Bui Diem was born in Phủ Lý, Hà Nam, French Indochina, on October 1, 1923. [8] He was the nephew of Trần Trọng Kim , who served as the Prime Minister of Emperor Bảo Đại . [ 9 ] Diem had been active in politics since he studied at Pomelo School and joined the Nationalist Party of Greater Vietnam ( Đảng Đại Việt ) in 1944 ...
Bùi Hoàng Việt Anh and Hồng Lĩnh Hà Tĩnh won the Vietnamese Second Division in 2019, and were promoted to the V.League in 2020. [6] [7]In the 2020 V.League 1, Việt Anh became a reliable center-back at Hà Nội [8] [9] when he played in place of Đỗ Duy Mạnh and Trần Đình Trọng, both of whom were injured.
Born in An Giang, Vĩ Hào spent his entire youth career playing for his local team An Giang FC. [2] In 2021, he was loaned to PVF to play in the 2021 Vietnamese League Two, but didn't make any appearance after the league was cancelled due to the difficult Covid-19 situation in Vietnam.
Trần Lệ Xuân (Vietnamese pronunciation: [t͡ɕən˨˩ le˧˨ʔ swən˧˧]; 22 August 1924 [2] – 24 April 2011), more popularly known in English as Madame Nhu, was the de facto First Lady of South Vietnam from 1955 to 1963.
Bùi Công Tắc was born on 5 May 1965 in the city of Đà Lạt in South Việt Nam. He grew up near the Saint Nicholas Cathedral, but at the age of 10, his family moved to Sài Gòn, or what is now Hồ Chí Minh City. According to Trác, his father wanted to name his children after the children of the legendary family (Sơn-Hà-Xã-Tắc ...
Bùi Thị Bích Phương (born 30 September 1989, in Quang Ninh), better known as Bích Phương is a Vietnamese pop music singer. She entered the entertainment industry as a contestant of Season 3 of Vietnam Idol in 2010, and has since been established as one of Vietnam's most popular singers of the 2010s.
In 1963, after the military overthrow of the minority Catholic regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem, Nhất Hạnh returned to South Vietnam on 16 December 1963, at the request of Thich Tri Quang, the monk most prominent in protesting the religious discrimination of Diem, to help restructure the administration of Vietnamese Buddhism. [13]
The Buddhist crisis (Vietnamese: Biến cố Phật giáo) was a period of political and religious tension in South Vietnam between May and November 1963, characterized by a series of repressive acts by the South Vietnamese government and a campaign of civil resistance, led mainly by Buddhist monks.