Vietnamese people in the Czech Republic

{{Short description|Ethnic group}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022}}

{{Infobox ethnic group

| group = Vietnamese people in the Czech Republic

| population = {{circa|70,000}}{{cite web|title=Statistiky: Cizinci s povoleným pobytem|url=https://www.mvcr.cz/clanek/cizinci-s-povolenym-pobytem.aspx?q=Y2hudW09MQ%3d%3d|publisher=Ministry of the Interior of the Czech Republic|language=cs|access-date=2024-12-08}}{{efn|Including those with temporary residence.}}

| regions = Prague, Cheb District

| languages = Vietnamese, Czech

| religions = Vietnamese folk religion, Mahayana Buddhism,{{cite news|url=http://www.thanhniennews.com/overseas/?catid=12&newsid=35384|title=First Vietnamese pagoda opens in Czech Republic|date=26 January 2008|access-date=2008-02-01|work=Thanh Nien News|publisher=Vietnam National Youth Federation |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080131024208/http://www.thanhniennews.com/overseas/?catid=12&newsid=35384 |archive-date = 2008-01-31}} Roman Catholicism, Protestantism

|related-c =

}}

Vietnamese people in the Czech Republic, including citizens and non-citizens, are the third-largest ethnic minority in the country overall (after Slovaks and Ukrainians), and the largest Asian ethnic group, numbering more than 38,000 people according to the 2021 census.

It is the third-largest Vietnamese diaspora in Europe, after Germany and France, and one of the most populous Vietnamese diasporas of the world.

Demographics

{{Historical populations

|title = Vietnamese citizens legally residing in the Czech Republic as of 31 December (excluding Czech citizens of Vietnamese ethnicity)

|source = https://www.czso.cz/documents/11292/44321488/c01R04_2016.xlsx/50fe0cfc-7c34-4325-9d83-31c574f4cab3?version=1.0 {{Dead link|date=February 2022}}

|1994|9633

|2001|17462

|2004|34179

|2007|51159

|2009|61178

|2014|56609

|2017|59808

|2020|62842

}}

According to the 1991 census, there were 421 ethnic Vietnamese in the Czech Republic. According to the 2001 census, there were 17,462 ethnic Vietnamese in the Czech Republic. In the 2011 census, 29,660 people listed their ethnicity as Vietnamese. In the 2021 census, 31,469 people listed their ethnicity as Vietnamese, and 7,254 other people listed Vietnamese ethnicity as one of two their ethnicities (making it 38,723 people in total).{{cite web |title=Národnost|url=https://scitani.gov.cz/narodnost|publisher=Czech Statistical Office|work=Census 2021|access-date=2024-12-09}}

Nguyen, the most common Vietnamese surname, was the 9th most common surname in the Czech Republic in 2011, when 21,020 people with this surname were registered.{{cite news |title=Nguyen je devátým nejčastějším příjmením v Česku, poráží i Procházky|url=https://www.idnes.cz/zpravy/domaci/devatym-nejcastejsim-prijmenim-v-cesku-je-nguyen.A110608_131133_domaci_jj|work=iDNES.cz|language=cs|date=2011-06-08|access-date=2024-12-09}}{{efn|However, the statistics are distorted by the fact that female and male forms of the same Czech surnames were counted separately, while the total number of Nguyens refers to both male and female bearers of the surname.}}

The largest group of Vietnamese people (about 16,000, including those with temporary residence) lives in Prague. About 2,500–3,000 people are registered in each of the other largest cities in the Czech Republic – Brno, Ostrava and Plzeň. The main centre of the Vietnamese community is Cheb, with about 3,300 people.

History

Vietnamese immigrants began settling in the Czech Republic during the communist period, when Vietnam, which sought to bolster its skilled workforce, sent students and guest workers to socialist Czechoslovakia for education and training.{{cite news|first=Coilin|last=O'Connor|url=https://english.radio.cz/czech-republics-vietnamese-community-finally-starting-feel-home-8607557|title=Is the Czech Republic's Vietnamese community finally starting to feel at home?|publisher=Czech Radio|date=29 May 2007|access-date=2024-07-03}} The Vietnamese communist government was told to pay the western communist countries for their help in the Vietnam War. In lieu of money, they sent their citizens there as indentured workers for subsistence wages. Following the collapse of communism in Czechoslovakia, a significant number have moved towards establishing their own businesses and integrating more broadly into society, similar to the experience of other overseas Vietnamese in Western countries. However, the small business sector remains the key economic domain of first-generation Vietnamese people in the Czech Republic.{{cite journal|url=http://www.provokator.org/articles/still-thorn-eye-vietnamese-czech-dialog|title=Still a Thorn in the Eye: The Vietnamese-Czech dialog|journal=Provokator Magazine|first=Martina|last=Čermáková|date=4 April 2007|access-date=2008-02-01}}

Status

In the Czech Republic, national minorities are afforded classic national minority rights, including government funding for the protection of their language and culture. In recent years, the Vietnamese community has sought recognition as a national minority. In 2004, however, the Government Council for National Minorities, the advisory body of the Czech Government on the issues of national minorities, concluded that the Vietnamese do not constitute a "national minority", as this term only applies to indigenous minorities who have inhabited the Czech territory for a long period of time.{{cite web|url=http://www.praha-mesto.cz/(thqmni55wvwoc2e2w0h2rk45)/default.aspx?id=67308&ido=6383&sh=-888388072|title=The City of Prague's National Minority Policy|publisher=Prague City Hall|year=2007|access-date=2008-02-01}} Eventually in 2013, a representative of the Vietnamese was accepted as a member of the Government Council for National Minorities, which in the absence of precise legal criteria, has been understood as an official recognition of the Vietnamese ethnic minority as a national minority by both authorities and the public.{{cite journal|first=Marián|last=Sloboda|date=2016|title=Historicity and citizenship as conditions for national minority rights in Central Europe: old principles in a new migration context|journal=Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies|volume=42|issue=11|pages=1808–1824|doi=10.1080/1369183x.2015.1132158|s2cid=146245837}}{{cite journal|url=http://www.brill.com/products/reference-work/european-yearbook-minority-issues-volume-2013|first1=Kyril|last1=Kascian|first2=Hanna|last2=Vasilevich|date=2013|title=Czech Republic Acknowledgement of Belarusian and Vietnamese as New Minorities |journal=European Yearbook of Minority Issues|volume=12|pages=353–371|doi=10.1163/9789004306134_015|access-date=2017-08-23}} In Prague, which has the largest community of Vietnamese, a Vietnamese representative had been a member of the city's National Minority Council and Vietnamese had been included in Prague's policy for national minorities before this happened at the national level.

Notable people

See also

Notes

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References

{{Reflist}}