Vietnam Photo Tour

In addition to the amazing traditional and ancient sites we will visit on our “The Other Vietnam: A Cultural Photo Tour”, a unique cultural photography tour with Roger Nelson and Son Nguyen, we will also have the opportunity to do street shooting in the exciting and pulsating Saigon as featured in this attached NY Times story. For more information call 415-331-3791

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/21/world/asia/ho-chi-minh-city-finds-its-soul-in-a-voracious-capitalism.html?emc=edit_th_20150721&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=55342089

Capitalist Soul Rises as Ho Chi Minh City Sheds Its Past
The city, still known locally as Saigon, is a bastion of capitalism.
Credit Christian Berg for The New York Times

HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — Taking a puff from a hookah and a sip from her beer, Thuy Truong, a 29-year-old tech entrepreneur in a black cocktail dress, pondered the question: What were her thoughts on the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon? “Forty years ago?” she yelled over the body-rattling roar of nightclub music. “Who cares!”

Four decades after the victory of Communist forces, the soul of this city, still known locally as Saigon, seems firmly planted in the present. For the young and increasingly affluent, Saigon is a city that does not want to look back, loves having fun and perhaps most of all is voraciously capitalistic.

The apartment building where evacuees clambered up an outdoor staircase to board a C.I.A. helicopter in a chaotic rooftop operation, a scene captured in an iconic photograph, is now at the heart of a neighborhood filled with luxury shops selling $1,000 Rimowa suitcases and $2,000 Burberry suits.

A newly paved walkway runs down the median of nearby Nguyen Hue Street, a magnet for teenagers on skateboards and in-line skaters who swoosh past a temporary display of photographs honoring a deceased senior official of the Communist Party. A statue of Ho Chi Minh, the Communist revolutionary leader, is sandwiched between a luxury hotel and a refurbished French colonial building that will soon house a Brooks Brothers store.

Two-thirds of the Vietnamese population was born after the fall of Saigon and the reunification of Vietnam in 1975. Among the young there is gratefulness that they are coming of age now, when the country is at peace after so many centuries of wars, occupation and entanglements with foreign armies.

“I feel lucky that I was born a long time after 1975,” said Tue Nghi, who at 22 has her own company that buys, refurbishes and sells homes. From a childhood of poverty and misfortune, Ms. Tue Nghi parlayed a small trading company into a thriving business, and now owns four cars and numerous houses.  New money is everywhere in Saigon, the former capital of South Vietnam, because all the old money fled or was stripped away when the Communist North won the war.

In the early years of a unified Vietnam, the government pursued disastrous experiments with collectivized farms and bans on private enterprise. The country’s leaders changed course around the time the Soviet Union collapsed, embracing the market economy, a pillar of the very system they had fought to defeat. Since then, Saigon, a freewheeling bastion of capitalism before 1975, has returned to its roots with vigor.

Ralf Matthaes, a Canadian who arrived in Vietnam in 1993, remembers streets filled with “nothing but bicycles.” “If you saw a car you would actually stop and stare at it,” he said.

Motorcycles have taken over the city streets now, and often the sidewalks. The roar of so many internal combustion engines in unison is the hallmark of a modern Vietnamese city and sounds like a giant wave crashing and rolling onto the shore. Gone are the Communist ethos of conformity and the shunning of ostentatiousness that came with it.

A decade ago Mr. Matthaes, who manages a market research consultancy here, had a Vietnamese colleague who was so embarrassed by her BMW that she covered it with cardboard when colleagues came to her house. “That is one of the single largest changes,” he said. “Today you see people driving to a cafe and parking their car where everyone can see it. It’s gone from a society hiding its wealth to flaunting it.”

If, for the Americans, the war here, in which 58,000 Americans and as many as three million Vietnamese died, was on some level about keeping Vietnam safe for capitalism, it turns out that they need not have worried. Capitalism here churns relentlessly, aided by what Ted Osius, the United States ambassador, calls “the most entrepreneurial people on earth.”

Last year, 78 percent of registered companies in Ho Chi Minh City shut down, according to government statistics, as the country was emerging from a debt crisis. But the creation of new companies has since gathered pace; so far 26 percent more new companies have been formed this year than in the same period last year.

City planners here speak approvingly of the intense competition and the constant cycle of corporate failure and rebirth. The name cards of government officials still say “Socialist Republic of Vietnam,” but their talking points would bring a smile to Adam Smith. “Weak companies will fail; that’s normal,” said Tran Anh Tuan, the acting president of the Ho Chi Minh City Institute for Development Studies, a government planning agency. “They can learn from failure. That’s a good way to develop.”

Indeed, the shell of a Communist command economy remains: The state-owned companies that make up around one-quarter of the economy have large debts and are not very efficient. The private sector and foreign companies are what keeps the economy buzzing. More than 200,000 migrants a year flock to Ho Chi Minh City from other parts of Vietnam. The city counts eight million registered residents, but estimates of the total population reach 12 million.

Rags-to-riches stories are everywhere.

Ms. Thuy Truong, the tech entrepreneur, did not have electricity in her home until she was 7. She now develops smartphone apps and commutes between Mountain View, Calif., and Ho Chi Minh City. She recently sold her software firm to Weeby, an American company, for more than a million dollars. (She will not say exactly how much.) She turns 30 in December.

Nguyen Trung Tin, 28, took over his parent’s real estate company last year. He remembers his parents’ relentless struggle to turn nothing into a sizable fortune, with them studying Chinese, Japanese and Russian language tapes well into the night in the one-room apartment they shared when he was a boy.  Now Mr. Tin is in the thick of the glamour of the new Vietnam. He owns two nightclubs, an events company and a Thai restaurant. But he criticizes many of his generation for forsaking what had been a culture of self-improvement for a culture of materialism for its own sake.

“They see the fast cars, they have Louis Vuitton bags and Christian Louboutin shoes,” he said. “For them it’s just a question of how do I get that. They are hungry for the wrong reasons and for the wrong things.”

The easy money was made more than a decade ago, when property prices soared and millionaires were minted overnight. It now takes a lot of hard work, luck and often government connections to make a fortune.

But Ho Chi Minh City is still a magnet for the young, a place of opportunity and fun. Luong Thi Hai Luyen, 29, came to Saigon from her native Hanoi, the capital, to study for a master’s degree in cultural studies and find a job.
“In Hanoi, we think about the future, saving for the future,” she said. “Here they don’t think about yesterday — or tomorrow. They live in the moment.”

Correction: July 21, 2015
An earlier version of this article misspelled the name of a 22-year-old Vietnamese businesswoman. She is Tue Nghi, not Thu Nghi.

Best regards,
Teri

Future Photo Tours Destinations

An Advance Peak At Future Photo Tours Destinations In the Works

On our website in our Future Destinations section, there is a series of amazing photo tour opportunities that will be released for booking shortly; these include Mongolia, Kashmir & Ladakh, Tibet, Sardinia & Southeast Asia Hill Tribes (3 Countries). We suggest you review these trips now as they will be launching soon.

But at A Different Perspective we never stop looking for new destinations that bring our clients to new and exciting photo destinations that will produce lifetime experiences and images. So we wanted to let you know about the next round of tours that are currently in development – – they include Morocco, Eastern Turkey, Georgia (with an Armenia Extension), Orissa (India) and Mexico.

Morocco Photo Experience to be led by Ali Alami, who has been referred to by one world-class professional photographer as “perhaps the best guide I have ever had.” When asked what his favorite part about guiding was, Ali replied, “I love happy clients and introducing them to my people, culture and history.” Visiting Chefchaouen, Volubilis, Meknes, Essaouria as well as the must see places of Casablanca, Fes and Marrakech,

Both the Eastern Turkey Photo Adventure and the Georgia with Armenia Extension Photo Safari will be led by Mehmet Olzbaci, who recently created the very first organized photo tours to Georgia and Armenia. Mehmet was also one of the first people to organize and operate photo tours in Turkey. Mehmet has encyclopedic knowledge of the destinations he takes tours to and is an accomplished photographer himself. This combination allows him to provide travel photographers with expert assistance in seeking iconic images. ,

Orissa Tribal Photo Tour, led by DV, a disciple of Manoj Sharma considered by many to be the dean of photo guides in India. This tribal tour will take you way off the beaten path in the remote state of Orissa visiting peoples not found in any other part of India. Mr. Sharma considers DV to be the best photo guide for this exotic region. In addition to getting to know the villagers of this region and capturing their images, you will have opportunities to photograph extensive ruins and spiritual exotica.

Mexico City through The Lens of Keith Dannemiller – a unique opportunity to engage in a street shooting odyssey in one of the best street shooting cities in the world with a world-class street shooter. Keith Dannemiller is a North American born photojournalist who has lived in Mexico for almost thirty years. He has covered many of the leading stories coming out of Mexico for the American and International media. Keith who is totally bi-cultural will help you discover the beauty, the passion, the beat and the grit that makes Mexico City and the surrounding area one of the most exciting photo destinations anywhere. You will immerse yourself in marketplaces, religious observances, Aztec dances, street festivals and the daily life of this pulsing Latin Megapolis.

Please check A Different Perspective http://differnetperspectivetours.com for dates and availability for our current exciting photo tours as well as our upcoming shooting opportunities. At A Different Perspective we always try to offer more future destinations to help you, the advanced photographer explore and become a part of the world in greater depth!
Call for More Information: 415-331-3791 or Email: teri@differentperspectivetours.com

Looking forward to hearing from you!

Best regards,
Teri