HomeNewsOpinionWhat culture tells us about Vietnam’s ties to India 

What culture tells us about Vietnam’s ties to India 

At the level of Vietnamese elite, a peaceful transfer of Indian culture to Vietnam from the beginning of the Common Era is used to balance the influence of China. For an India lacking powerful economic or military instruments, collaboration in preservation of Champa monuments, or support for the practice of Yoga in Vietnam, demonstrates willingness to deploy an effective China- facing capability

January 10, 2025 / 15:50 IST
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Vietnamese do not write revisionist histories to deny the migration of Indian princes, merchants, and philosophers in the first millennium.

India’s amiable history with Vietnam began with peaceful migration to Southeast Asia from the beginning of the Common Era, and discovery of new land and sea routes. Yet, modern Vietnamese consider India distant and remote. Vietnamese visitors to India are “disappointed” at India’s miniscule Buddhist community. The scholars Thi Oanh Nguyen and Thuy Nguyen Pham allude to “differences in culture, customs, and languages,” and “political institutions, [and] national development strategies.” Rarely are Indian films and television shows broadcast. Just over 31,400 Vietnamese visited India in 2018.

India’s influence is acknowledged, not suppressed

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Indian culture reached Vietnam in “benign and peaceful” waves, while China’s onslaught was “forceful and potent.” India is neither a threat, nor concerning, some Vietnamese assert. Without surveys we cannot be sure this is a majority view.

Clearer is that Vietnamese do not write revisionist histories to deny the migration of Indian princes, merchants, and philosophers in the first millennium. There is recognition of the Hinduised Champa as a pillar of Vietnamese culture.