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dc.contributor.authorWeiss, Karin
dc.date.accessioned2008-05-20T18:59:28Z
dc.date.available2008-05-20T18:59:28Z
dc.date.issued2005
dc.identifier.citationAus Politik und Zeitgeschichte, 27: 24-30
dc.identifier.issn0479-611X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2436/27132
dc.description.abstractIn 1955-56, within the framework of the GDR's Solidarity programme, 348 Vietnamese pupils arrived in the GDR for education and training. They were the second group to do so after a group from North Korea. The Vietnamese were located in Dresden and Moritzburg. Arriving as children aged 10 to 14 years, most were adults on returning to Vietnam. Despite their diverse biographies, they have retained a close bond with their life in the former GDR, calling themselves the 'Moritzburgers' and meeting regularly in Vietnam. Through their various occupations and social positions they exercise considerable influence on the development of their country, as is exemplified in the detailed biographical study of Mirjam Freytag. The 'Moritzburgers' were soon followed by further groups of Vietnamese as part of inter-governmental training schemes. For example, from the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, many students, pupils and apprentices from Vietnam took part in a special training programme, 'Solidarity means to be victorious', designed as a form of aid for socialist fraternal countries. The unification of the two Vietnamese states allowed for the continuation of educational and occupational training courses in the GDR for schoolchildren, students, apprentices and scientists.
dc.language.isode
dc.publisherBonn: Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung
dc.relation.urlhttp://www.bpb.de/publikationen/R9SNLF,0,Vietnam:_Netzwerke_zwischen_Sozialismus_und_Kapitalismus.html
dc.subjectGDR
dc.subjectEast Germany
dc.subjectGerman history
dc.subject20th century
dc.subjectVietnam
dc.subjectVietnamese students
dc.subjectDresden
dc.subjectSolidarity programme
dc.subjectMoritzburg
dc.subjectInter-governmental training schemes
dc.subjectFreytag, Mirjam
dc.subjectSocialist countries
dc.subjectInternational co-operation
dc.subjectInternational students
dc.titleVietnam: Netzwerke zwischen Sozialismus und Kapitalismus
dc.title.alternativeVietnam: networking between socialism and capitalism
dc.typeJournal article
dc.identifier.journalAus Politik und Zeitgeschichte
html.description.abstractIn 1955-56, within the framework of the GDR's Solidarity programme, 348 Vietnamese pupils arrived in the GDR for education and training. They were the second group to do so after a group from North Korea. The Vietnamese were located in Dresden and Moritzburg. Arriving as children aged 10 to 14 years, most were adults on returning to Vietnam. Despite their diverse biographies, they have retained a close bond with their life in the former GDR, calling themselves the 'Moritzburgers' and meeting regularly in Vietnam. Through their various occupations and social positions they exercise considerable influence on the development of their country, as is exemplified in the detailed biographical study of Mirjam Freytag. The 'Moritzburgers' were soon followed by further groups of Vietnamese as part of inter-governmental training schemes. For example, from the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, many students, pupils and apprentices from Vietnam took part in a special training programme, 'Solidarity means to be victorious', designed as a form of aid for socialist fraternal countries. The unification of the two Vietnamese states allowed for the continuation of educational and occupational training courses in the GDR for schoolchildren, students, apprentices and scientists.


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