Măng Đen
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Măng Đen
Thị-trấn Măng-đen | |
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Măng Đen Township | |
Nickname(s): "Three Lakes and Seven Falls" (Ba hồ bảy thác) | |
Country | Vietnam |
Province | Kon Tum |
District | Kon Plông |
Township establishment | September 1, 2019 |
Township hall | No. 05, Phan Đình Phùng Street |
Government | |
• Type | Township People's Committee |
• Chairman | Đặng Ngọc Hiệp |
Area | |
• Total | 148.07 km2 (57.17 sq mi) |
Elevation | 1,200 m (3,900 ft) |
Population (2019) | |
• Total | 6,913 |
• Density | 47/km2 (120/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+07:00 |
ZIP code | 60000 |
Website | Mangden.konplong.kontum.gov.vn |
Măng Đen (formerly Đắk Long commune) is a township and administrative seat of Kon Plông District in Kon Tum Province in Vietnam.[1]
History
[edit]Măng Đen (present) or Măng Đeng (before) was originally the Kinh phonetic transcription of T'măng-deeng in M'nâm language, which means "the vast plain".
XX century
[edit]- Pre-1975
Previously, Măng Đeng was part of Măng Cành commune, Kon Plông district, Kon Tum province. It is an area including : Măng Đeng village (the capital of Kon Plông rural district), Măng Đeng plateau, Măng Đeng stream... Under the regime of the Republic of Vietnam, Măng Đeng was militarized to become the headquarters ("Commanding and Coordinating Center for Military March", Trung-tâm chỉ-huy và phối-hợp hành-quân, or simply "Military March Center", Trung-tâm hành-quân) of the Free World Military Forces (FWMF) in the Central Highlands. After the Sihanouk regime was overthrown in 1970, FULRO forces even unilaterally declared from Phnum Penh that Măng Đeng was the provisional capital of an independent Dagar government, but in reality, it still belonged to the South Vietnam's manager.[2][3][4]
- 1976 to 2003
After the collapse of the Republic of Vietnam, Măng Đeng was changed to Măng Đen in the administrative documents of the new government. This has caused many misunderstandings, because măng đen means "the black bamboo shoot" in Kinh language. Many textbooks teaching national language for ethnic minorities have sometimes explained that this locality has many black bamboo shoots, so it has such a name.
During the 1970s until 1992, Măng Đen was one of the hot spots (khu vực nổi cộm) on security and defense by the harassment of FULRO groups. The most typical were two raids in 1984 and 1986–7, causing many Kinh police and civilians to casualties. That is the cause of the poverty of this area for many years.
XXI century
[edit]- 2004 to 2019
On January 8, 2004, the Government of Vietnam issued the Decree 13/2004/NĐ-CP. Accordingly, establishing Đắk Long commune (xã Đắk Long, means "the big stream" in M'nâm language) on the basis of 13,555 ha of natural area and 2,054 people of Măng Cành commune.
On July 16, 2019, the National Assembly Standing Committee issued the Resolution 720/NQ-UBTVQH14, which took effect from September 1, 2019.[5] Accordingly, establishing Măng Đen township (thị trấn Măng Đen) on the basis of 148,07 km2 of natural area and 6,913 people of Đắk Long commune.
- 2020 to present
During the Covid-19 pandemic, Măng Đen was continuously advertised in the Vietnamese mass media as a safe destination (điểm-đến an-toàn) for tourists, who liked to experience the feeling of being in harmony with the fresh nature. Some newspapers even called Măng Đen as "the second Dalat" (Đà Lạt thứ hai).[6][7] However, it is all aiming to stimulate eco-tourism in one of the poorest localities in the Central Highlands.
Deputy Prime Minister Trần Hồng Hà signed the Decision No. 1492/QD-TTg on November 29, 2023, to approve Overall planning task of building Măng Đen Tourist Resort, Kon Plông district, Kon Tum province until 2045.[8] Under that project, Măng Đen will be meticulously planned to become a large-scale eco-tourism area in Southeast Asia, which complies with forestry laws and guidelines for climate change. Therefore, starting in 2023, the Kon Tum Provincial People's Committee has approved a planning project called as Măng-Đen National Ecotourism Area (Khu Du-lịch Sinh-thái Quốc-gia Măng-Đen). Accordingly, the entire area of the township will be "frozen" (đóng băng) into a non-industrial zone to preserve the original ecosystem, thereby turning Măng Đen into a unique biosphere reserve of the whole country.
Culture
[edit]Around the early XX century, some French engineers went to Măng Đeng Plateau to survey and started planting pine trees with the intention of turning this area into a high-class resort similar to Dalat. But for some reason, the project failed.
Măng Đen's identity is formed very late and mainly based on two groups of people : Kinh (majority) and M'nâm. Since 2023, the mascots known to the township are coffee and goats. They are originally strategic items of the local economy. In particular, Café Măng Đen has been registered as a national brand since 2024.
Although Măng Đen is considered a land with great potential for tourism, but because of force majeure reasons, this locality has not been exploited for decades. But since the policy of promoting non-industrial economy, Măng Đen has suddenly become a "fertile" land for real estate speculators.[9]
- Our Lady of Mangdeng
During the Vietnam War, there was a small airport built in a hurry by American soldiers to make a response for helicopters. According to the document of the Bishopric of Kontum, the Mangdeng Chapel was built in 1971 as a place for the ceremony for local people and American soldiers. According to Bishop Joseph Nguyễn Minh Kông's report on July 3, 2011, he himself took the statue of Our Lady of Fatima on the helicopter to place in front of the chapel's door. However, the statue position was less than 2 kilometres from the airport, so it randomly became the target of the North Vietnamese artillery in 1974. The chapel was hit by big bullets so it was abandoned without any recovery plan, while the fate of the statue was not interested.
Over the years since the artillery, the area of the chapel and the airport has become a jungle. That area sometimes became a forestry, sometimes planned to build roads, but the statue was still in the position with erosion over time. The hands of Our Lady were broken for an unknown cause, but all the efforts were unsuccessful. That is why the statue was also known as Our Lady Without A Hand (Thánh Mẫu cụt tay).
At the end of August 2006, a Christian discovered the existence of the statue, so he immediately submitted to the Bishopric of Kon Tum. On December 28, 2006, a delegation led by Bishop of Kon Tum Micae Hoàng Đức Oanh visited the statue. A year later, on December 9, 2007, Bishop Oanh and priests, monasticists, and more than 2,000 civilians offered Mass to respect Our Lady of Mangdeng. Since then, this place has become a pilgrimage of parishioners in the Central Highlands and December 9 every year becomes the pilgrimage day for Our Lady of Mangdeng (Lễ triều-cận Đức Thánh-Mẫu Măng-Đeng) at the Archdiocese of Kon Tum.[10]
Currently, Kon Tum Archdiocese has maintained an agency called Pilgrimage Center Named Our Lady of Mangdeng to coordinate religious activities every day. The current shepherd is Bishop Joan-Baptista Hồ Quang Huyên, who took this parish on September 7, 2024.
- Mangdeng in fictions
In the early 2020s, when Mangdeng tourism became a hot trend in Vietnamese GenZ community, many young people approached this place in the poetic perspective. Writer Nguyễn Nhật Ánh relied on this trend to imagine the story of a space travel center located in Mangdeng, where suddenly became the attack target of UFOs.
Geography
[edit]The territory of Mangdeng Township is located on the 24th National Highway, with a hot and humid climate all year round and on the basalt land with thousands of years old due to the movement of ancient volcanoes.
According to an article on ZingNews in 2024, when the Central Highlands entered the rainy season (from May to September), Mangdeng landscape often suffered the dominance of the dense fog, so it feels the same in the Central European plateaus.
Topography
[edit]Mangdeng is a newly-formed town on the sparsely populated Mangdeng Plateau in the northern part of the Central Highlands region. The town was built in 2003 around the M'nâm villages of Dak Ke and Kon Bring and an abandoned American airfield called Plateau G.I. The settlement received township status in 2019.[11]
At 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) above sea level, the township has cool climate with average temperatures of 17.0–22.7 °C (62.6–72.9 °F). Mangdeng's specific sights are pine forests and wild Himalayan cherry blossom in the winter. It is dubbed as "the second Da Lat" due to its temperate climate.[12]
Administration
[edit]The area of Mangdeng Township is divided into 4 residential groups (cụm cư dân) : Kon Pring, Kon Chốt, Kon Brayh, Kon Xủh.
This is the only administrative unit in Kon Tum province that Kinh people dominate the majority. M'nâm people have left most of the decades ago because of the difficulty of agricultural conditions. They only have a small number in the township nowadays. In addition, other ethnic groups only have almost negligible quantities.
The most popular religion in Mangdeng is the Roman Catholic Church, besides a small number of people who believe in atheist theory.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Phân công chuẩn bị phiên họp thứ 35 của UBTVQH". Online Newspaper of the Government - Viet Nam Government Portal. Retrieved 2019-07-13.
- ^ Một thời chống Fulro qua hồi ức của những “chiến binh”
- ^ Một thời gian khổ chống FULRO
- ^ An ninh Tây Nguyên : Thầm lặng những chiến công chống Fulro
- ^ Resolution 720/NQ-UBTVQH14 in 2019 on the establishment of Mang-Den township in Kon-Plong district, Kon-Tum province
- ^ Măng Đen - The second Dalat of the Highlands
- ^ Măng Đen - "Second Dalat" on Kon Tum plateau is being awakened
- ^ Mangdeng will become a regional tourist and resort center in 2045
- ^ Dismantling many violating works in Măng Đen
- ^ About Our Lady of Mangdeng
- ^ "Ủy ban Thường vụ Quốc hội xem xét, phê chuẩn bổ nhiệm nhân sự; thành lập đơn vị hành chính mới". tinnhanhchungkhoan.vn. Retrieved 2019-07-13.
- ^ TITC. "Măng Đeng - Đà Lạt thứ hai của Tây Nguyên". Tổng cục Du lịch Việt Nam (in Vietnamese). Retrieved 2020-09-13.