The
telling stories focus on traditional and contemporary customs, the
lives and culture of people in the three countries where generations
have relied on the legendary river for their survival.
The stories are told via a collection of 200 artifacts as well as
photos and sounds, providing visitors an insight into the lives of
millions of Southeast Asian residents living along Mekong River as well as their struggles against natural disasters and environmental pollution.
Visitors to the show on every Saturday and Sunday will have a chance
to enjoy dishes made of rice, fish and coconut copra and milk, and meet
with students from Laos and Cambodia.
The three-month event is part of a cultural preservation project
sponsored by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
and carried out by 15 museums and agencies of these countries over the
past four years.
The exhibition will conclude on February 25, 2010 and then move on to the Mekong Delta province of An Giang , and Cambodia , Laos and Sweden until 2012.