



We went out to dinner in Hanoi and had the pleasure of hearing true Vietnamese folk music. The instrument on the right is a Dan Bau which has only one string. This is one of the most well-known traditional Vietnamese instruments. It has the most beautiful sound. The one of the left is a 36-stringed Dan Tam Thap Luc. I was floored when the duo played "Scarborough Fair" and it sounded better than Simon and Garfunkel.


A Buddhist shrine on an island in Turtle Lake. You can see the people going up the grotto hill to light incense. It is a very quiet and holy place where you can truly feel the presence of faith.
This is the large room at the seminary. Close to the camera you can see Xavier, Huggy, Bill, and Tony. Behind them are the sisters (Sisters of the Lovers of the Holy Cross) and behind them the seminarians and priests. It was a large group and so full of fun. I think when we weren't studying or practicing we were laughing.
Here we are at mass in the seminary chapel. It was afternoon and the temperature inside was high, but the feelings were heartfelt and the music exquisite...
...perhaps because of Fr. Luis' playing! He made that keyboard sound like a Wurlitzer with all those pipes. Unfortunately, he couldn't come up from below the stage like at the old Loew's Theater in Syracuse.
Dong Vo, S.J, giving the final instructions...and Yosup Joo in the background after finishing his best impresssion of Carlos Santana. Dong is from Saigon, or as Tony Sauer likes to call it, HCMC. We got to meet Dong's sister Ann later. She's a really nice person who apparently is nice enough to put up with Dong.
The entire group: sisters, seminarians, priests, and crazy Americans. This is the beautiful grotto to Mary on the grounds of the Hanoi Seminary built many years ago. We were all together for only three days before we divided into four groups, but it was a difficult parting. Lots of hugs and tears, but we were to return to the same place in a month, so it was only "So long" and not "Goodbye."