Brief introduction of Spring Festival
Chinese Spring Festival or the Chinese Lunar New
Year, the new year of Chinese traditional calendar, is the most widely
observed festival throughout the whole country. To the Chinese people
it is as important as Christmas to people in the West. The dates for
this annual celebration are determined by the lunar calendar rather
than the Gregorian calendar, so the timing of the holiday varies from
late January to early February. To the ordinary Chinese, the festival
actually begins on the eve of the lunar New Year's Day and ends on the
fifteenth day of the first month of the lunar calendar. The 15th of
the first month, which normally is called the Lantern Festival, means
the official end of the Spring Festival in many parts of the country.
Spring Festival is a time for family reunions,
for visits with friends, for good wishes for the coming year. In addition,
the whole family will eat dumpling together. On the first day of the
Spring Festival, friends and relatives will call on each other to exchange
greetings and wish another the happiest possible New Year.
Preparations for the Spring Festival or
Chinese New Year begin the last few days of the last moon, when houses
are thoroughly cleaned, debts repaid, hair cut and new clothes purchased.
Houses are festooned with paper scrolls bearing auspicious antithetical
couplet (as show on both side of the page) and in many homes, people
burn incense at home and in the temples to pay respects to ancestors
and ask the gods for good health in the coming months. Spring couplets
and big character of "Fu", means "happiness", are
displayed everywhere as a prayer for good luck.
Guo Nian," meaning "passing the year" in Chinese
is the common name among the Chinese people for the Spring Festival.
It actually means greeting the New Year. At midnight at the turn of
the old and New Year, people used to let off firecrackers, which serve
to drive away the evil spirits and to greet the arrival of the New Year.
In an instant the whole city would be engulfed in the deafening noise
of the firecrackers.
People often wonder why the date for Chinese New Year changes each year.
The Chinese calendar is a combination solar/lunar calendar, based on
a number of rather complex astronomical calculations, including the
longitude of the sun. Chinese New Year falls on the second new moon
after the winter solstice (all months begin with a new moon).
It was in recent times that people called the New Year as the Spring
Festival. Although China had conducted legislative reform for
several times, Chinese traditional calendar was still applied, only
after the Revolution of 1911, the Gregorian calendar had begun to be
applied. For distinguishing two new years in Gregorian calendar and
Chinese traditional calendar, additionally, the New Year in Chinese
traditional calendar is around the Beginning of Spring, so people termed
the New Year in Chinese traditional calendar as the Spring Festival.
How Chinese celebrate the Spring Festival?
In China, New Year's Day is a solemn occasion. Every family performs
religious rites at the family altar.
In order to rejoice at the New Year, people wished others a happy new
year and blessed heartily. Some stick calligraphies full of joy on doors,
most of them were antithetical couplet, phrase, individual character,
such as: blessing, longevity, luckiness, propitious New Year and so
on. Whereas, some people pasted paper-cuts for window decorations to
do away with the old and set up the new, the patterns of paper-cuts
mainly consisted of figure, flower, character, any of the twelve animals
representing the twelve Earthly Branches, and other animals. On New
Year's Eve, all the members of families come together to feast. Jiaozi
is popular in the north, while southerners favor a sticky sweet glutinous
rice pudding called Nian Gao.
Before the eve of the New Year, everyone tries to come back home from
every corner of the country to join the entire family, just like Americans'
practice for Christmas, to greet the New Year. A New Year big dinner
is served. After the meal, the table is cleared, dishes washed and put
away. Then it is time to undertake final preparations to meet the New
Year.
In the morning, people put on their new clothes and shoes. Men, with
their wives, call on relatives and friends to wish them a "Happy
and Prosperous New Year ". The caller is served tea with sweet-meats;
melon seeds, both red and black; and fruits and delicacies such as puffed
rice cakes, dump-lings and deep-fried round doughnuts. In addition,
liquor and tobacco are offered. Before leaving, the well-wisher present
gifts of money wrapped in red paper to all the unmarried children of
the family.
Starting from the New Year's Day, people began going out to visit friends
and relatives, taking with them gifts such as fruits, wines, flowers,
etc. This period was a time for visiing and amusement. Common expressions
heard at this time are: Guonian Hao (Happy
New Year).
People also enjoy all sorts of entertainment, going to the temple fairs,
treating themselves to the local delicacies, and watching performances
of fold art forms, which usually include ballads singing, story telling,
comic dialogues, clapper talk and cross talk.
During this period, quarrels are to be avoided. Words with bad connotations
such as defeat, illness, surgical operations, a coffin or death are
not to be used. Dishes are handled carefully, for breaking a dish on
New Year's Day indicate bad luck for the coming year.
Here are details of the ways you can celebrate Chinese New Year:
Clean House - Before the New Year arrives, the Chinese consider
it very important to give the house a thorough cleaning, sweeping away
any bad luck that may have accumulated over the past year.
Decorate! - Doors and window panes are also often painted red,
considered to be a lucky color. In addition, people like to hang paper
cuts on doors and windows. (Paper cutting is an ancient Chinese art
form dating back to the Han dynasty).
Don't clean for the first few days of the New Year - if you do any sweeping
during this time, you risk sweeping away your good luck.
Offer a Sacrifice to the Kitchen God - Many families have a poster
of the Kitchen God in their kitchen. The custom is to offer a ceremonial
sacrifice to the Kitchen God, to make sure that he gives a good report
on the family's behavior when he returns to heaven. Sticky Cake (Neen
Gow) is popular, or children may rub honey on him.
An important tradition on New Year's Eve is for families to gather together
and spend the evening preparing jiaozi or boiled dumplings. According
to Chinese Culture, it is common to hide a coin or Chinese date in some
of the dumplings. Whoever gets these dumplings will supposedly have
good luck in the coming year.
Give out money packets - On New Years day, children receive leisee
- red packets decorated with gold symbols and filled with "lucky
money".
Serve festive foods - Throughout the New Years season, certain foods
are served because they symbolize abundance and good fortune. Besides
preparing special dishes, tangerines and oranges are often passed out
to children and guests, as they symbolize wealth and good luck.
Prepare a Tray of Togetherness - This is a circular tray with eight
compartments, each containing symbolic foods such as lotus seeds and
lychee nuts, which provides a sweet beginning to the New Year.
Why arranged Spring Festival in winter?
In ancient times, people called the Spring Festival as New Year. The
reason for why ancients arranged the beginning of the year in cold days
was that people had few work to do instead of harvesting in autumn,
collecting in winter and ploughing in spring, weeding in summer. Farmers
made full use of such a slack season to celebrate joyfully.
Tales about Spring Festival or Chinese New year.
According to an ancient legend, people were once tormented by a beast
called a Nian - a ferocious creature with an extremely large mouth,
capable of swallowing several people in a single bite. Relief from the
Nian came only when an old man tricked the beast into disappearing.
In reality, New Years festivities probably evolved from a desire to
celebrate the end of winter and the fertility and rebirth that come
with the spring, much like the ancient Roman festival of Lupercalia.
Today, New Years is about family reunions and wishing everyone good
fortune in the coming year.
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