Baguette? No, Banh Mi: Vietnam Celebrates Independence from French Rule 

Customers buy baguettes at the Hoan Boulangerie bakery shop in Hanoi, Vietnam, August 30, 2025. (Reuters)
Customers buy baguettes at the Hoan Boulangerie bakery shop in Hanoi, Vietnam, August 30, 2025. (Reuters)
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Baguette? No, Banh Mi: Vietnam Celebrates Independence from French Rule 

Customers buy baguettes at the Hoan Boulangerie bakery shop in Hanoi, Vietnam, August 30, 2025. (Reuters)
Customers buy baguettes at the Hoan Boulangerie bakery shop in Hanoi, Vietnam, August 30, 2025. (Reuters)

As Vietnam celebrates the 80th anniversary of its declaration of independence from colonial rule this week, French cultural influence remains ubiquitous, but not many people in the Southeast Asian nation are aware of its prevalence.

A massive military parade will herald on Tuesday the independence proclaimed by revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh on Sept 2, 1945, which was meant to end nearly a century of French rule but instead started a decade-long war until the defeated French eventually left in 1954.

Ba Dinh Square in central Hanoi, where the legendary leader affectionately known in Vietnam as Uncle Ho, made his historical declaration, is flanked by two of the capital's best preserved French colonial buildings - now home to the presidential palace and the foreign ministry.

But none of the six under-30 Hanoians interviewed by Reuters in front of the yellow-painted foreign ministry headquarters, a masterpiece of French Indochine style, were aware of its architectural origin. "I came here because it has a unique architecture and it is a popular spot promoted by celebrities," said Nguyen Thi Trang, 30, who showed surprise when told about its French origin.

Vietnam's relations with France have moved from colonial to congenial. When French President Emmanuel Macron visited Hanoi in May, the two countries signed deals worth $10 billion, including on planes and satellites.

He was delighted when students at a university event addressed him in perfect French.

However, such fluency in French, once the language of the elites in Vietnam, is increasingly rare, reflecting the global decline of the langue de Moliere.

Only 400 Vietnamese high-school students picked French as one of the subjects for their graduation exams this year, according to the education ministry, whereas more than 358,000 chose English and about 4,400 opted for Chinese.

"If I must choose, I would prefer Chinese over French as the second foreign language to study because it feels more familiar. And China is our neighbor," said Hoang Thu Ha, a 25-year-old content creator.

The French embassy in Hanoi said this year 63,000 people were registered in French language classes, with approximately 400 teachers in Vietnam.

French "retains a certain prestige" in Vietnam while other tongues were rapidly gaining ground in the country of 100 million, including Japanese and Korean, it said.

CROISSANTS AND PATE

Nowhere is the French legacy more visible than in Vietnamese gastronomy.

Cafes line virtually every street in the country, croissants are on display in myriad patisseries, and pate is regularly added to local dishes.

Baguette-shaped bread is used for the most common local fast food option, known as banh mi, a savory sandwich with unlimited fillings to please all tastes, including vegetarian.

But among the interviewed Hanoian youth, none recognized banh mi's French roots.

Nguyen Van Hoan, a 60-year-old entrepreneur who owns a famous bakery in the center of Hanoi, acknowledged the French legacy in the Vietnamese love for bread.

But he added that to survive, "French cuisine has had to adapt to match Vietnamese tastes."



Grabbing the Bull by the Tail: Venezuela’s Cowboy Sport

A cowboy gestures during a bull-tailing competition held as part of the "Fiestas del Alma Llanera" celebration in San Fernando de Apure, Apure State, Venezuela, on February 27, 2026. (AFP)
A cowboy gestures during a bull-tailing competition held as part of the "Fiestas del Alma Llanera" celebration in San Fernando de Apure, Apure State, Venezuela, on February 27, 2026. (AFP)
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Grabbing the Bull by the Tail: Venezuela’s Cowboy Sport

A cowboy gestures during a bull-tailing competition held as part of the "Fiestas del Alma Llanera" celebration in San Fernando de Apure, Apure State, Venezuela, on February 27, 2026. (AFP)
A cowboy gestures during a bull-tailing competition held as part of the "Fiestas del Alma Llanera" celebration in San Fernando de Apure, Apure State, Venezuela, on February 27, 2026. (AFP)

Four mounted cowboys jostle for position near the bull pen gate.

When the bull bolts out into the ring, a mad scramble begins as the riders vie to grab its tail and knock it to the ground.

Bull tailing, or "coleo" is to Venezuela's "llanos" (tropical grasslands) what rodeo is to Texas -- an integral part of popular culture that has survived opposition from animal welfare groups.

Unlike their Texan counterparts, "coleadores" don't try to ride the bull or grab it by the horns but rather chase its tail.

The coleo is one of the high points of the annual "llanera" fair in the central city of San Fernando de Apure, a three-day extravaganza of cowboy culture, including fast-paced, swirling "joropo" partner dancing listed on the UN's Intangible Cultural Heritage list.

Experts trace coleo to Spanish colonial times and link it to cattle herding work.

It is also practiced across the border in Colombia's "llanos," as well as in Brazil and Mexico, countries with strong cattle breeding traditions.

Most of the "coleadores" or bull tumblers learn the sport from their fathers or grandfathers. Women and children have also been known to compete.

For Neomar Sanoja, one of the judges, it's Venezuela's "national sport" -- a bold claim in a baseball mad nation.

- 'Feel the adrenaline' -

Rafael Delgado, 35, started competing at around 10, encouraged by his father, a ranch hand.

"It's part of our 'llanero' culture, part of being Venezuelan," he told AFP before entering the ring.

To reach the bull's tail, riders spur on their horses and when they draw alongside the animal's flanks, perform acrobatic maneuvers to try flip the beast.

The bull writhes, struggles back on its feet and tries to escape along the "manga de coleo," a 200-meter-long sand corridor, with the riders in hot pursuit.

Points vary depending on how the bull tumbles, with extra marks for those who manage to get all four legs in the air.

About 200 competitors took part in the four-minute bouts in San Fernando de Apure, wearing hockey helmets and padding on their arms and legs as armor.

Llanera music blared while a judge narrated the action with rapid-fire delivery.

Florelbis Linares told AFP she wanted to take up coleo despite the misgivings of her coleatero boyfriend, who she watched perform from the stands.

"You really feel the adrenaline watching from here," the 23-year-old said, her legs hanging over the guardrail around the ring.

- 'Defenseless animals' -

The bull's suffering is little cause for concern among aficionados of coleo.

Most of the animals who enter the ring are headed for the slaughterhouse.

Luis Garcia, a 32-year-old rider, accused critics of the sport of hypocrisy, noting that most show no outrage in the face of intensive cattle rearing and meat consumption.

The AnimaNaturalis animal rights NGO, which is active in Spain and Latin America, has called for the practice to be abolished.

"It is cruelty and an abuse of power by llaneros against defenseless animals," it argued on its website.

"Is this what you call culture?" the Napda Foundation, a Venezuelan animal rights foundation, asked, posting a video of coleo spectators kicking and throwing objects at a bull to force it to get back on its feet.

"The alleged 'humans' behave like beasts. This must stop now."


Michelangelo’s Works Hidden in ‘Secret Room’, Researcher Says

Pedestrians walk past the Basilica of Santa Agnese Outside the Walls as a marble bust is displayed inside after being identified as a work by Michelangelo Buonarroti after centuries without attribution, following a decade of archival research by Italian researcher Valentina Salerno in Rome on March 4, 2026. (AFP)
Pedestrians walk past the Basilica of Santa Agnese Outside the Walls as a marble bust is displayed inside after being identified as a work by Michelangelo Buonarroti after centuries without attribution, following a decade of archival research by Italian researcher Valentina Salerno in Rome on March 4, 2026. (AFP)
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Michelangelo’s Works Hidden in ‘Secret Room’, Researcher Says

Pedestrians walk past the Basilica of Santa Agnese Outside the Walls as a marble bust is displayed inside after being identified as a work by Michelangelo Buonarroti after centuries without attribution, following a decade of archival research by Italian researcher Valentina Salerno in Rome on March 4, 2026. (AFP)
Pedestrians walk past the Basilica of Santa Agnese Outside the Walls as a marble bust is displayed inside after being identified as a work by Michelangelo Buonarroti after centuries without attribution, following a decade of archival research by Italian researcher Valentina Salerno in Rome on March 4, 2026. (AFP)

Renaissance artist Michelangelo ordered many of his artworks to be hidden by his pupils in a secret room to protect them for posterity, an Italian researcher claimed Wednesday.

According to renowned art historian Giorgio Vasari, the Italian genius burned a large number of his own drawings and sketches before his death in Rome in 1564.

But researcher Valentina Salerno says she has unearthed unpublished archival documents that reveal a plot to squirrel away his works.

"One of these three unpublished documents I found in the archives speaks of a room" kept by students of the Michelangelo school, the origins of which "can be traced back" to the artist, Salerno told AFP on the sidelines of a press conference in Rome.

"Assets are hidden inside this room. These assets are locked away so tightly that they require a system of multiple keys, so that no one can access them without the permission of others," she said.

Salerno was researching a book on Michelangelo when she came across a document that showed the artist had in 1550 joined the Brotherhood of the Most Holy Crucifix. Those close to him in his final years were members too.

Over a decade of research, she followed the document trail between a series of archives in the Vatican, Italy and European cities including Paris.

As part of what she called a "maniacal plan" cooked up by Michelangelo, his works were to be hidden "because otherwise it would all end up with a nephew he detested".

"The goal was to pass on to his poor, vulnerable, non-noble descendants the material to be able to continue studying, to transmit his art to future generations," she said.

Those involved in the plan went on to form the famous art Academy of San Luca in the 16th century, she added. It still exists today.

Salerno believes the secret room designed to safeguard the artist's creations was likely somewhere inside the Saint Peter in Chains church in central Rome.

- Michelangelo bust -

During her research, she also stumbled across a reference to a bust at the Basilica of Sant'Agnese, also in Rome, currently attributed to an anonymous artist.

She found documents attributing the white bust to Michelangelo down the centuries.

In the 1930s it appears to disappear from documentation, only to reappear in the 1980s, attributed to a minor artist.

Italy's cultural authorities later declared it to be a work by an unknown sculptor instead.

But Salerno insists the bust is a genuine Michelangelo, not just due to the paper trail, but also because it shares a striking resemblance to Tommaso dei Cavalieri, a young nobleman.

Salerno's work has not yet been peer reviewed, but she is a member of the Vatican committee for the celebrations marking the 500th anniversary of Michelangelo's birth.


Prince Mohammed bin Salman Project Restores Al-Hawza Mosque in Aseer

Following its inclusion in the project in 2022, the mosque's area was expanded to 293 square meters - SPA
Following its inclusion in the project in 2022, the mosque's area was expanded to 293 square meters - SPA
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Prince Mohammed bin Salman Project Restores Al-Hawza Mosque in Aseer

Following its inclusion in the project in 2022, the mosque's area was expanded to 293 square meters - SPA
Following its inclusion in the project in 2022, the mosque's area was expanded to 293 square meters - SPA

The Prince Mohammed bin Salman Project for the Development of Historical Mosques is rehabilitating Al-Hawza Mosque in Dhahran Al-Janoub, Aseer, as part of its mission to preserve Islamic heritage under Vision 2030.

Built in 8 AH by Ali ibn Abi Talib during his trip to Yemen to spread Islam, the mosque is one of the oldest in the region and has undergone expansions in 1213 AH and 1353 AH. Its unique architectural identity reflects the Sarawat region's style, utilizing layered mud bricks and local wood to harmonize with the mountainous environment, SPA reported.

Following its inclusion in the project in 2022, the mosque's area was expanded to 293 square meters, increasing its capacity to 148 worshippers while maintaining authentic features like its historic internal well.

By utilizing specialized Saudi companies and engineers, the project achieves a balance between traditional sustainability and modern standards, fulfilling strategic goals to restore architectural authenticity and highlight the Kingdom’s civilizational depth.