|
Vietnamese Brazilians are a small community in Brazil consisting of approximately 150–200 permanent residents of Vietnamese ancestry. Many of these residents are the "boat people" who emigrated from Vietnam following the Fall of Saigon – the capture of the South Vietnamese capital by the North Vietnamese communist regime under Ho Chi Minh. Today, the community remains relatively obscure in Vietnam and among other Vietnamese communities abroad.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Cong dong nguoi Viet tai Brazil 1 )〕 ==History== There is no official record of Vietnamese immigrants migrating to Brazil prior to 1989, the year when Vietnam and Brazil initiated formal diplomatic relations. According to a report from a major daily Vietnamese newspaper, ''Tuổi Trẻ'', there had been three Vietnamese academics and professors who taught at the University of São Paulo in the 1950s. A few documents about immigration research such as the ''Cebri'' and the ''História da Marinha Mercante'' documented three main waves of almost 150 Vietnamese immigrants. These three waves received aid and eventually citizenship from the Brazilian government. Most of these immigrants were boat people seeking asylum after the Fall of Saigon; they had been found and rescued by a Brazilian oil ship near the Philippines. The first wave consisted of over 50 people arriving in Brazil around February 1979. The second wave of 26 immigrants arrived in September of the same year. The third wave, a group of 10, arrived in the early 1980s. The Vietnamese were reported to have had trouble adapting to their adopted country.〔 Among the most prominent of these troubles was the communication barrier between them and the native Brazilians: learning Portuguese proved to be a difficult task for the Vietnamese, as the language was obscure in Vietnam. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Vietnamese Brazilian」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|