BootsnAll Travel Network



A visit to Uncle Ho

I made an effort to get up especially early to visit as the Mausoleum containing “Uncle Ho” (not Uncle Mo as I had in my head) is only open mornings until 11am. The Mausoleum complex houses the mausoleum itself, a Ho Chi Minh museum, a pagoda and a house.

Uncle Ho

To get in to see embalmed Uncle Ho you have to first leave all your bags and belongings at the entrance. If you are wearing shorts or a skirt that is too short they give you a wrap skirt to cover you up. Likewise they don’t like you to wear strappy tops. I was asked to take my camera out of my bag and take it with me which I thought was odd as you aren’t allowed photographs inside, but as our “group” wended its way through the checkpoints, we passed through a security X-Ray and my camera was put in a little carrier bag only to go a further 10 metres to reach a shed where it was to be handed in, in exchange for a token. (They then “truck” your cameras around to the exit door of mausoleum where you collect them when you leave.) The actual Mausoleum entrance was another 200 metres around the corner and down the street and we were marched around in crocodile fashion by a number of guards.

Despite being an early Saturday morning there were a lot of people there visiting, mostly Vietnamese. Having said that the queue moved quickly. Once you’re inside the building itself you go up and around one flight of stairs, past the uniformed guards every few metres until you reach the inner room where Uncle Ho lies, tastefully lit, with a guard at each corner of his case. Not being allowed to take photographs or linger is the reason the queue moves so fast – you are barely in there for 30 seconds. You have to show respect, by not wearing a hat or putting your hands in your pockets. It was an interesting experience as he is as an important political 20th century figure as Lenin & Chairman Mao (who are also embalmed, like Uncle Ho, against their wishes), if a little unusual for a Saturday morning…



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