Hmong Traditions – Parenting & Children
Most Hmong children learned to babysit their younger siblings and help with other chores at a very early age. Usually at the age of 6…
Most Hmong children learned to babysit their younger siblings and help with other chores at a very early age. Usually at the age of 6…
Being part of a family has always been important to the Hmongs and it is one of the basic parts of a Hmong life. They…
In a traditional Hmong society, divorce is rare. It is frowned upon and considered a disgrace to their family. However, it is allowed but not…
In the Hmong culture when a man finds a woman that he wants to marry, he must pay a bride price or dowry to the…
Bride kidnapping or forced marriage is an old tradition that is rarely practiced today and is a form of marriage by abduction, it is known…
The older generation of the Hmong people believes in polygamy, where a Hmong man can have more than one wife as long as he can…
The courtship in a traditional Hmong culture is not like it is in the United States. The boys and girls tend to stay apart more…
In the traditional Hmong marriage, Hmongs with the same clan name are forbidden to marry each other and therefore must find a marriage partner from…
vangclan.weebly.com The first wave of Hmong immigrants arrived between 1975-1980. A second wave of immigrants arrived between 1980-2003. The Hmong settled into America with the…
After the Hmongs fled into Southeast China, they spread across Laos, Vietnam, Thailand and Burma where they survived by hunting and farming up in the…
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