- Vietnamese community in Senegal
The Vietnamese community in Senegal consists of both
expatriate technicians and labourers fromVietnam , as well as the mixed-race descendants of early 20th-century migrants. A total of several hundred are estimated to live inSenegal ; the national capitalDakar even boasts a few Vietnamese restaurants.citation|last=Paringaux|first=Roland-Pierre|title=Redevelopment in Senegal|periodical=Le Monde diplomatique|date=June 12 ,2001 |url=http://mondediplo.com/2001/06/12senegal|accessdate=2008-08-27] citation|title=Vietnamese Nuoc Mam: a sauce whose time has come to Senegal|periodical=News and Highlights|publisher=Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations|date=November 15 ,2001 |url=http://www.fao.org/news/2001/011105-e.htm|accessdate=2008-08-27] citation|title=Senegal reinvents grassroots development: South helping South is key to new approach|periodical=News and Highlights|publisher=Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations|date=March 2 ,2002 |url=http://www.fao.org/news/2002/020301-e.htm|accessdate=2008-08-27] citation|last=Phuong|first=Tran|title=Vietnamese Continue Traditions in Senegal|periodical=Voice of America|date=July 9 ,2007 |url=http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-07-09-voa19.cfm|accessdate=2008-08-27]Both being former French colonies, Vietnam and
Senegal have a long history of cultural links. Beginning in the 1930s, many Senegalese began serving the in Vietnam as soldiers for France; some took local wives, with whom they had children. However, in the turbulent 1940s, withWorld War II and theFirst Indochina War , many Vietnamese women married to Senegalese followed their husbands back to Senegal. By 2007, Jean Gomis, himself a Vietnamese descendant and an unofficial "community leader", estimated that fewer than five of those wives remained alive, while 300 of their descendants lived scattered throughout Senegal. They retained some knowledge of theVietnamese language and still cookVietnamese cuisine ; however, Gomis expected that within 10 years, the language would no longer be spoken.In the 1990s, Vietnamese agricultural technicians began to arrive in Senegal under the sponsorship of the
United Nations 'Food and Agriculture Organization , through an initiative to promote cooperation between the nations of theglobal South . By 2001, their numbers had risen from 40 to 100. Most technicians come to Senegal on two year stints, unaccompanied by their spouses, and live in group housing with other Vietnamese. They aim to promote small-scale technologies and techniques suitable to Senegal's level of economic development; for example, Vietnamesebeekeepers introduced Senegalese farmers to manually-driven centrifugalhoney extractor s and Vietnamese-style concretebeehive s. Others attempted to familiarise Senegalese people to the representative Vietnamese fish sauce "nước mắm ". Though as of 2001, it was only produced and used by the restaurants in Dakar, Vietnamese technicians in the seaside town ofM'Bour trained a women's group in its preparation, and produced roughly 20 tanks of the sauce. Most of the technicians speak only Vietnamese, though they typically learn someWolof language agricultural vocabulary during their time in the country.References
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