Office worker Nguyen Thi Ly respectfully placed a tray with sweets, water, money – fake bills of both dong and US dollars – and the familiar Valentine’s roses on the altar at the Ha Pagoda.
“Please help me Buddha, I want to have a boyfriend this year to stop being single,” she mumbled before the altar, already packed with dozens of other similar trays.
While Valentine’s Day stems from Christianity, Vietnamese have increasingly marked the occasion in recent years, seeking divine intervention in their love lives.
“It’s a spiritual procedure, but it reflects that young people now have become insecure about how to find the right other half,” said educational psychology expert Tran Thanh Nam.
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Heavily focused on his work as a doctor, Nguyen Van Duong is single in his early 30s. His marital status worries his parents and himself.
“My parents are getting older day by day. They just want me to get married and have kids,” Duong explained as his reason for worshipping on Wednesday.
The legal marriage age is 18 for women and 20 for men, but as in many increasingly urban, educated societies, few Vietnamese settle down so early.
In 2022 the average age of marriage was just under 30, according to official data reported by state media.
“They have become like robots,” he said.
This may partly explain the appeal of supernatural help.
“I have prayed here at this pagoda five times for a relationship,” Nguyen Thi Trinh, 26, said.
“I believe I will be blessed with a boyfriend this year, so that the family would stop asking ‘When are you going to get married?’”