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| The school was built almost entirely with North Korean donations |
Wearing traditional dress, the children in Hanoi's only North Korean-founded kindergarten belt out Korean songs and recite their Korean vocabulary -- skills they hope to show off to Kim Jong Un when he visits Vietnam next week.
The
reclusive North Korean leader is making his first trip to Vietnam to meet with
US President Donald Trump between February 27 and 28.
It is their
second summit, during which Washington hopes to see progress on dismantling
Pyongyang's nuclear programme.
The serious
summit agenda was far from the minds of toddlers at the Vietnam-DPRK Friendship
Kindergarten on Tuesday.
Instead the
three-to-five-year-olds sang and danced in the 'Kim Il Sung' classroom named
after Kim Jong Un's grandfather, one of Hanoi's closest allies during the Vietnam
War.
"Jal
gaseyo!" the kids chanted -- goodbye in Korean -- at the school where
portraits of communist leaders past -- Kim Il Sung, his son Kim Jong Il and
Vietnam's revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh -- hang on the wall.
Established
in 1978 at a time when conflict-battered Hanoi still received aid from
Pyongyang, the school was built almost entirely with North Korean donations,
from the blankets and mattresses for naptime to the bowls and utensils used at
mealtime.
Today some of the school's 450 pupils learn about North Korean culture, from kimchi and kimbap to traditional dress, and occasionally receive visits from North Korean officials and embassy personnel.
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Pupils
learn about North Korean culture, from kimchi and kimbap to traditional dress
|
Today some of the school's 450 pupils learn about North Korean culture, from kimchi and kimbap to traditional dress, and occasionally receive visits from North Korean officials and embassy personnel.
"Even
though North Korean friends are in difficult conditions, they still pay due
attention to this kindergarten," former head teacher Hoang Thi Thanh told
AFP.
The
school's current headmaster Ngo Thi Minh Ha is hoping that support extends to
North Korea's top leader, who will meet Trump in Hanoi.
"We
really hope to welcome North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to visit Vietnam and the
Vietnam-DPRK friendship kindergarten, we have proposed our wish (to the
embassy)," she told AFP.
Pyongyang
has not yet confirmed the summit, with news about its date and location coming
only from the White House, and details of the ultra-secretive leader's trip
remain unknown.
The meeting
is aimed at building on Trump and Kim's first summit in Singapore in June, the
first ever meeting between sitting leaders from the US and North Korea, who
have never formally ended the 1950-53 Korean War.
Former head
teacher Thanh said she would love to see Kim visit the school, but is also
hoping for a productive summit.
"I
hope for peace and stability in Korean peninsula in the next meeting. I also
hope this meeting will bring closer the two sides of Korea like (north and
south) Vietnam," she said.


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