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Khăn rằn

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A museum exhibition shows women wearing the black-and-white checkered khăn rằn scarf, knotted or draped, and black Áo bà ba tunic
Khăn rằn can be worn around the head or the neck.
Củ Chi Tunnels exhibit showing Viet Cong members wearing khăn rằn as headbands

The khăn rằn (Vietnamese: khăn, "towel, scarf" + rằn "striped"; Chữ Nôm: 䘜吝) is a traditional Vietnamese checkered black-and-white scarf adapted from the Cambodian krama.[1] It is traditionally worn in the region of the Mekong Delta in southern Vietnam.[2]

During the Vietnam War, the distinctive scarf was donned by National Liberation Front soldiers to identify themselves.[3][4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Tuyển, D. (2021, March 23). Khăn rằn mang lại bình an và may mắn [Scarves bring peace and good luck]. Thoi Trang Tre. Retrieved February 28, 2022, from https://thanhnien.vn/thoi-trang-tre/khan-ran-mang-lai-binh-an-va-may-man-1851384170.htm
  2. ^ The girl in the picture: the story of Kim Phuc Denise Chong - 2000 "Sometimes, all she caught by the light of her lamp was a checkered, black-and-white scarf, the trademark khan ran worn by the southern revolutionaries."
  3. ^ Stanley I. Kutler (1996) Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War ISBN 978-0-132-76932-7 "Note the black-and-white checked scarf in the background, an identifying symbol of the Viet Cong guerrilla"
  4. ^ "Vietcong NVA guerilla scarf". www.vietnam-surplus.com. Retrieved 2021-09-02.