VietNamNet Bridge – A Hanoian hip-hop dancer finds dancing more than his passion when he volunteers to teach hip-hop to youngsters in Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. Bich Huong reports.

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Spreading joy: Spark Circus volunteers give children tools and circus lessons. — VNS Photo Phuong Vu


Since 2013, Nguyen Anh Tuan has travelled every year to neighbouring countries including Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and the Philippines to teach hip-hop to street children and other disadvantaged youngsters.

The 29-year-old first became a volunteer seven years ago after he met Jerry Snell – a Canadian dance choreographer and hip-hop veteran who visited Vietnam to promote his Street Art for Street Kids initiative, teaming up with the country’s top street dance crews with shelters for vulnerable children to offer dance lessons and companionship.

“In a summer day in 2012, when I was teaching hip-hop to youngsters in Hanoi’s Lenin Park, a foreigner came and asked me if I wanted to go to Thailand to teach hip-hop to street children,” Tuan remembered.

“It was Jerry [Snell] and he told me about his ‘Street Art for Street Kids’ and ‘Social Circus’ which use the language of the circus to communicate with people and bring joy to the community,” Tuan said.

“Jerry’s invitation was sudden and big surprise to me. I agreed,” Tuan said.

For his first trip to Thailand with Snell [who died two years ago], Tuan travelled to Pattaya, Bangkok and Chiangmai where he, together with circus performers from many countries offered circus and hip-hop lessons to street children.

The lessons were expected to utilise the collaborative and creative spirit of arts to guide vulnerable children away from violence and crimes.

At that time, the trip to Thailand was considered Tuan’s second bold decision.

Earlier, when he was a 3rd-year student at FPT University – a private information technology university in Hanoi, he decided to halt his studying and started practising hip-hop on the streets instead of the university’s club.

“No one in my family has a job related to arts or dancing. My parents did me no favours as they believed that as a school dropout I lost opportunities for the future,” Tuan said.

“At the age of 21, I was old enough to make a decision on my own and I informed my parents of the decision.

“When I dance hip-hop, I’m myself the most."

Tuan explained: “The world of hip-hop is not only about dance but also graffiti, beatboxing and music production — the creation of hip-hop music. It’s worth exploring and I can challenge myself much with hip-hop.

"Moreover, as a dancer who practises in a group, the group becomes your second family where every member cares and shares with each other.”

To Tuan, dancing is not only a physical exercise, or a spiritual remedy but a way of communication.

He said that dancing helped him keep balance in both physical and mental health as well as generate positive energy in him.

Spreading positive energy

“Dance-teaching tours have shown me the way. Literally, the volunteering lights up the way I chose for my life and leads me to other meaningful ways,” Tuan said.

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Teaching: Vietnamese hip-hop dancer Nguyen Anh Tuan teaches Burmese children hip-hop lessons when travelling to Mae Sot - a district in western Thailand that shares a border with Myanmar to the west. — VNS Photo Phuong Vu


He said that in the most recent volunteer tour "Spark Circus" he joined in February 2018, he travelled to Mae Sot — a district in western Thailand that shares a border with Myanmar to the west.  

Tuan and other volunteers arrived in one or two refugee camps which are home to thousands of children.

Living conditions at the border area and in camps were quite poor. They were given daily necessities by non-governmental organisations and the Thai government but children there hardly had a chance to practise artistic activities or even have a playground.

Tuan said that when he and the circus arrived at the camps, children were excited to welcome the guests.

“The children shouted loudly, laughed and concentrated on the hip-hop dances and circus performances,” Tuan said, adding that their visible happiness encouraged the performers.

“When we – clowns, acrobats, dancers, hoopers or magician – gave them tools, instrument and instructed them on some simple performances, the children looked very happy,” Tuan said.

“Without speaking their mother tongue, as a hip-hop dancer, with the movement of legs, arms and the whole body, I could easily teach them some dance lessons,” Tuan said.

“With some music, few words like ’right’, ’left’, ’go around’ or ’five, six, seven, eight’, I found no barrier between me and the children,” Tuan said.

“It seems that to such children, the guests’ visits and playing with them was enough to make them happy.”

“A friend of mine, a Canadian volunteer who performs as a clown said to me that when we do this volunteer work to bring the children joy, it’s like God sends angels to Earth to make life better,” Tuan said, adding that he found the meaningfulness of his voluntary work.

He also had nice memories of volunteering.

During a trip to Mea Sot District, his group performed at a hospital for children. The volunteers talked, taught and played with the children without being aware the children were suffering from diarrhoea. After leaving the hospital, one by one, many persons in the group suffered from diarrhoea too.

In his studio – No 6 Dance Studio at 11 Tran Thai Tong Street in Hanoi – Tuan began classes for young hip-hop lovers. He keeps challenging himself with new exercises, inspiring others and preparing his next voluntary trips.

Tuan said that next year, Social Circus planned to come to Vietnam.

Source: VNS

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