From political leader to sacred symbol: the process of vernacular sacralization of Ho Chi Minh in the worship spaces of private home shrines in Northern Vietnam

Auteurs-es

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.15175/ad6j2050

Mots-clés :

Ho Chi Minh, Northern Vietnam, private home shrines, sacred symbol, vernacular sacralization

Résumé

This article examines the transformation of the symbol of Ho Chi Minh from a political leader into a sacred symbol within the worship spaces of private home shrines in Northern Vietnam. Rather than approaching this phenomenon as a form of official veneration or ideological cultism, the study situates it within the analytical framework of vernacular sacralization, understood as a process shaped by non-institutional cultural and religious practices. Employing methods such as synthesis and analysis of secondary sources, participant observation, and case studies conducted at several representative private home shrines in Northern Vietnam, the article investigates the historical, cultural, and social conditions that underpin the sacralization of the Ho Chi Minh symbol in domestic sacred spaces. The analysis focuses on the spatial configuration of worship settings, ritual practices, modes of spiritual cultivation, and the mechanisms through which vernacular sacralization operates. Through this approach, the study elucidates how Ho Chi Minh is reinterpreted as a moral exemplar, a protective figure, and an object of veneration within popular spiritual life. The findings indicate that this process is closely associated with the depoliticization and moralization of Ho Chi Minh’s image, alongside its incorporation into indigenous belief systems. The domestic worship space thus becomes a site of memory negotiation, where revolutionary memory is transformed into sacred social memory through repetitive ritual practices. By engaging in comparative dialogue with cases of political leader sacralization worldwide, the article contributes to broader scholarly debates on the interrelationship between politics, religion, and cultural memory in contemporary society.

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Biographies de l'auteur-e

  • Pham Thanh HANG, Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, Hanoi, Vietnam

    Pham Thanh Hang holds a PhD in Religious Studies from the Academy of Social Sciences, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences. She is currently a lecturer and researcher specializing in Religious Studies at the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, Vietnam. Her main research focuses on contemporary religious practices and beliefs, as well as religious policies and legal frameworks in Vietnam and in a comparative international context.

  • Nguyen Van THANG, Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, Hanoi, Vietnam

    Nguyen Van Thang holds a PhD in Anthropology from the Academy of Social Sciences, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences. He is currently a lecturer and researcher specializing in Ethnographic Anthropology at the Ho Chi Minh National Academy of Politics, Vietnam. His main research focuses on ethnic issues, ethnic relations, religion, and policies and laws related to ethnicity and religion in Vietnam and other countries around the world.

Références

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ENDRES, Kirsten W. Performing the divine: mediums, markets and modernity in urban Vietnam. Copenhagen: NIAS, 2011.

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MARR, David G. Vietnam: State, war, and revolution (1945–1946). Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2013.

NGUYEN, Hong Duong. The phenomenon of Ho Chi Minh worship in the ethical flow of ancestor veneration. In: WORSHIP OF HO CHI MINH IN CONTEMPORARY VIETNAM: EMERGING ISSUES. Proceedings […]. Vietnam: Institute of Ethnology and Religious Studies, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, 2025. p.35-45.

PHAM, Lan Oanh. From folk culture to the cultural personality of Ho Chi Minh: traditional values in the structure of national spiritual heritage. In: WORSHIP OF HO CHI MINH IN CONTEMPORARY VIETNAM: EMERGING ISSUES. Proceedings […]. Vietnam: Institute of Ethnology and Religious Studies, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, 2025. p. 137-146.

TRIFOI, Bianca. Kim was Korea and Korea was Kim: the formation of Juche ideology and personality cult in North Korea. 2017. Master’s thesis (Master of Arts in Asian Studies) _ Florida International University, Florida, 2017. https://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/record/11854/files/FIDC001747.pdf.

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Publié

2026-05-31

Comment citer

From political leader to sacred symbol: the process of vernacular sacralization of Ho Chi Minh in the worship spaces of private home shrines in Northern Vietnam. (2026). Revue Internationale d´Histoire Politique E Culture Juridique, 18(2), 253-293. https://doi.org/10.15175/ad6j2050