Spring
Festival
The
Spring Festival is the most important festival
for the Chinese people and is when all family
members get together, just like Christmas
in the West. All people living away from home
go back, becoming the busiest time for transportation
systems of about half a month from the Spring
Festival. Airports, railway stations and long-distance
bus stations are crowded with home returnees.
The Spring Festival falls on the 1st day of
the 1st lunar month, often one month later
than the Gregorian calendar. It originated
in the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600 BC-c. 1100 BC)
from the people's sacrifice to gods and ancestors
at the end of an old year and the beginning
of a new one.
Strictly speaking, the Spring Festival starts
every year in the early days of the 12th lunar
month and will last till the mid 1st lunar
month of the next year. Of them, the most
important days are Spring Festival Eve and
the first three days. The Chinese government
now stipulates people have seven days off
for the Chinese Lunar New Year.
Many customs accompany the Spring Festival.
Some are still followed today, but others
have weakened.
On
the 8th day of the 12th lunar month, many
families make laba porridge, a delicious kind
of porridge made with glutinous rice, millet,
seeds of Job's tears, jujube berries, lotus
seeds, beans, longan and gingko.
The 23rd day of the 12th lunar month is called
Preliminary Eve. At this time, people offer
sacrifice to the kitchen god. Now however,
most families make delicious food to enjoy
themselves.
After the Preliminary Eve, people begin preparing
for the coming New Year. This is called "Seeing
the New Year in".
Store owners are busy then as everybody goes
out to purchase necessities for the New Year.
Materials not only include edible oil, rice,
flour, chicken, duck, fish and meat, but also
fruit, candies and kinds of nuts. What's more,
various decorations, new clothes and shoes
for the children as well as gifts for the
elderly, friends and relatives, are all on
the list of purchasing.
Before the New Year comes, the people completely
clean the indoors and outdoors of their homes
as well as their clothes, bedclothes and all
their utensils.
Then people begin decorating their clean rooms
featuring an atmosphere of rejoicing and festivity.
All the door panels will be pasted with Spring
Festival couplets, highlighting Chinese calligraphy
with black characters on red paper. The content
varies from house owners' wishes for a bright
future
to good luck for the New Year. Also, pictures
of the god of doors and wealth will be posted
on front doors to ward off evil spirits and
welcome peace and abundance.
The Chinese character "fu" (meaning
blessing or happiness) is a must. The character
put on paper can be pasted normally or upside
down, for in Chinese the "reversed fu"
is homophonic with "fu comes", both
being pronounced as "fudaole." What's
more, two big red lanterns can be raised on
both sides of the front door. Red paper-cuttings
can be seen on window glass and brightly colored
New Year paintings with auspicious meanings
may be put on the wall.
People
attach great importance to Spring Festival
Eve. At that time, all family members eat
dinner together. The meal is more luxurious
than usual. Dishes such as chicken, fish and
bean curd cannot be excluded, for in Chinese,
their pronunciations, respectively "ji",
"yu" and "doufu," mean
auspiciousness, abundance and richness. After
the dinner, the whole family will sit together,
chatting and watching TV. In recent years,
the Spring Festival party broadcast on China
Central Television Station (CCTV) is essential
entertainment for the Chinese both at home
and abroad. According to custom, each family
will stay up to see the New Year in.
Waking up on New Year, everybody dresses up.
First they extend greetings to their parents.
Then each child will get money as a New Year
gift, wrapped up in red paper. People in northern
China will eat jiaozi, or dumplings, for breakfast,
as they think "jiaozi" in sound
means "bidding farewell to the old and
ushering in the new". Also, the shape
of the dumpling is like gold ingot from ancient
China. So people eat them and wish for money
and treasure.
Southern Chinese eat niangao (New Year cake
made of glutinous
rice flour) on this occasion, because as a
homophone, niangao means "higher and
higher, one year after another." The
first five days after the Spring Festival
are a good time for relatives, friends, and
classmates as well as colleagues to exchange
greetings, gifts and chat leisurely.
Burning fireworks was once the most typical
custom on the Spring Festival. People thought
the spluttering sound could help drive away
evil spirits. However, such an activity was
completely or partially forbidden in big cities
once the government took security, noise and
pollution factors into consideration. As a
replacement, some buy tapes with firecracker
sounds to listen to, some break little balloons
to get the sound too, while others buy firecracker
handicrafts to hang in the living room.
The lively atmosphere not only fills every
household, but permeates to streets and lanes.
A series of activities such as lion dancing,
dragon lantern dancing, lantern festivals
and temple fairs will be held for days. The
Spring Festival then comes to an end when
the Lantern Festival is finished.
China has 56 ethnic groups. Minorities celebrate
their Spring Festival almost the same day
as the Han people, and they have different
customs
Traditional
Chinese Festivals
Boasting
rich cultural meaning and a long history,
traditional Chinese festivals compose an important
and brilliant part of Chinese culture.
The formation of traditional festivals is
a long process of historical and cultural
accumulation in a nation or a state. Festival
customs passed down to today still show signs
of ethnic group struggles. Festival activities
always reflect primitive sacrifice, superstitious
taboo and earthly life, people's spirit and
religious influence. Sometimes historical
figures become the focus of a festival, showing
people's commemoration for them and endowing
some historical sense to it.
Moreover,
traditional Chinese festivals were often connected
with ancient astronomy, calendars and mathematics.
Jieqi, or the 24 seasonal division points,
is a key factor in forming traditional festivals.
According to the traditional Chinese calendar,
a year is divided into 24 points, which can
accurately show seasonal changes and acts
as a basic guidance system for agricultural
production. The 24 seasonal division points
came into being in the Warring States Period
(475 BC-221 BC).
Most traditional festivals took shape during
the Qin Dynasty (221-206
BC), the first unified and power-centralized
dynasty of China. By the Han Dynasty (206
BC-AD 220), China had experienced a great
development period and major traditional festivals
were fixed. In the most prosperous Tang Dynasty
(AD 618-907), traditional festivals liberated
themselves from primitive sacrifice, taboo
and mystery and became more entertaining.
From then on, festive occasions turned more
brisk and exciting and more and more folk
customs were developed. Some festivals and
customs we still follow today, but others
disappeared into the mists of time.
As China is a vast land and has many ethnic
groups, different ethnic groups have different
festivals in different places. Even on the
same festival, they follow different customs.
Here we introduce some important and commonly
celebrated festivals. In fact, these traditional
festivals have absorbed nourishment from different
regions and various ethnic cultures and are
a precious cultural heritage for the whole
Chinese nation and its guests.
Winter
Solstice()
As
early as 2,500 years ago, about the Spring
and Autumn Period (770-476 BC), China had
determined the point of Winter Solstice
by observing movements of the sun with a
sundial. It is the earliest of the 24 seasonal
division points. The time will be each December
22nd or 23rd according to the Gregorian
calendar.
The Northern hemisphere on this day experiences
the shortest daytime and longest nighttime.
After the Winter Solstice, days will become
longer and longer. As ancient Chinese thought,
the yang, or muscular, positive things will
become stronger and stronger after this
day, so it should be celebrated.
The
Winter Solstice became a festival during
the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) and thrived
in the Tang and Song dynasties (618-1279).
The Han people regarded Winter Solstice
as a "Winter Festival", so officials
would organize celebrating activities. On
this day, both officials and common people
would have a rest. The army was stationed
in, frontier fortresses closed and business
and traveling stopped. Relatives and friends
presented to each other delicious food.
In the Tang and Song dynasties, the Winter
Solstice was a day to offer sacrifices to
Heaven and ancestors. Emperors would go
to suburbs to worship the Heaven; while
common people offered sacrifices to their
deceased parents or other relatives. The
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) even had the record
that "Winter Solstice is as formal
as the Spring Festival," showing the
great importance attached to this day.
In some parts of Northern China, people
eat dumpling soup on this day; while residents
of some other places eat dumplings, saying
doing so will keep them from frost in the
upcoming winter. But in parts of South China,
the whole family will get together to have
a meal made of red-bean and glutinous rice
to drive away ghosts and other evil things.
In other places, people also eat tangyuan,
a kind of stuffed small dumpling ball made
of glutinous rice flour. The Winter Solstice
rice dumplings could be used as sacrifices
to ancestors, or gifts for friends and relatives.
The Taiwan people even keep the custom of
offering nine-layer cakes to their ancestors.
They make cakes in the shape of chicken,
duck, tortoise, pig, cow or sheep with glutinous
rice flour and steam them on different layers
of a pot. These animals all signify auspiciousness
in Chinese tradition. People of the same
surname or family clan gather at their ancestral
temples to worship their ancestors in age
order. After the sacrificial ceremony, there
is always a grand banquet.
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