Thursday, 15 August 2013

The Culture of Chinese, Traditional Chinese Festivals

        The traditional Chinese festivals are an essential part of harvests or prayer offerings. The most important Chinese festival is the Chinese New Year (Spring Festival), which is also celebrated in China, Korea, and other Asian countries. All traditional festivals are scheduled according to the Chinese calendar except the Qing Ming and Winter Solstice days, falling on the respective day in the Agricultural calendar. There are a lot of Chinese cultures in traditional Chinese festivals.

       
1)  Chinese New Year
Chinese New Year is an important traditional Chinese festival In China, it is also known as the Spring Festival, the literal translation of the modern Chinese name. Chinese New Year celebrations traditionally ran from Chinese New Year's Eve, the last day of the last month of the Chinese calendar, to the Lantern Festival on the 15th day of the first month, making the festival the longest in the Chinese calendar. Because the Chinese calendar is lunisolar, the Chinese New Year is often referred to as the "Lunar New Year”.

a)Reunion Dinner

A reunion dinner is held on New Year’s Eve during which family members gather for celebration. The venue will usually be in or near the home of the most senior member of the family. Children are supposed to return to their families, married couples will go to the male’s relatives and to the female's relatives on the second day of the festivities. If a family member couldn't participate in the grand feasting, his or her presence is usually symbolized by placing an empty seat at the banquet.The New Year's Eve dinner is very large and sumptuous and traditionally includes dishes of meat.

    B) Red Envelopes  
                       
Traditionally, Red envelopes or red packets (Mandarin: hóngbāo' ) are passed out during the Chinese New Year's celebrations, from married couples or the elderly to unmarried juniors. It is also common for adults or young couples to give red packets to children.
                                      
A married person would not turn down such a request as it would mean that he or she would be "out of luck" in the new year. Red packets are generally given by established married couples to the younger non-married children of the family. It is custom and polite for children to wish elders a happy new year and a year of happiness, health and good fortune before accepting the red envelope.

    C) Lion Dance
                         
                                   
Lion dance performance is everywhere while celebrating Chinese New Year. Lion dance is performed for helping to chase away the bad luck & bringing in luck and according to the traditional Chinese belief, it’ll also help to chase away ghosts and evil spirits, and since the monsters, ghosts, evil spirits and giants like Nian are afraid of loud noises, the dance has become a natural complement to the fire crackers' noise.


2)   Lantern Festival
The Lantern Festival ends the 15 day celebration of Chinese New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, and is celebrated the night of the first full moon of the lunar New Year. It’s also the first important festival after the traditional Chinese New Year. It’s marks the end of the two-week new year period. During Lantern Festival, people get together to celebrate the beginning of spring by lighting lantern, guessing riddles, and eating YuanXiao, also known as TangYuan, is a glutinous rice ball.

a)    Lighting Lanterns
                           
Lighting and watching lanterns, the main activity of lantern festival. Lanterns represent brightness, lighting lanterns could bring a brighter future for yourself. Besides, in some regions such as Taiwan and Anhui, the character ‘deng’ (lantern) is pronounced similarly to ‘ding’ (man) in local languages. Therefore, married women would specially wander underneath the lanterns during the festival, wishing to conceive baby boys from this behavior.
                          
b)   Guess Riddles
                                     
Guessing the lantern riddles, also known as playing lantern riddles, is one of the most important and popular activities of the Lantern Festival. Riddles are usually attached on to or hung beneath the lanterns. Sometimes winners would be get prizes if he or she’s guessing is right. Due to the difficulty of achieving the correct answers, this activity is also called “tiger-shooting”.
                      

c) Yuanxiao
Another indispensable custom of Lantern Festival, in addition to entertainment and beautiful lanterns, is eating Yuanxiao or Tangyuan (sweet stuffed dumplings made of glutinous rice flour served in soup). The Chinese name of Tangyuan is pronounced as similarly as Tuanyuan, which means the whole family gathering together happily. 
                                                                  
So Yuanxiao is a symbol of staying together, because roundness has the connotation of wholeness and togetherness in Chinese culture. In this way, people express their best wish for their family and their future life.

3)   Mid-Autumn Festival
The Mid-Autumn Festival is a popular harvest festival celebrated by Chinese and Vietnamese people. The festival is held on the 15th day of the eighth month in the Chinese calendar, during a full moon, which is in September or early October in the Gregorian calendar, close to the autumnal equinox. Mid-Autumn Festival is also known as Moon festival, because of the celebration’s association with the full moon on this night, as well as the traditions of moon worship and moon gazing.

a)    Mooncake
As with every Chinese holiday, the Mid-Autumn Festival has its own special food. People eat moon cakes for celebration. The moon cake is a kind of cookie with various fillings and on the surface are printed different artistic patterns depicting the story of Chang E flying to the moon. People treated this kind of food as one of the sacrificial offerings to the moon in the old days. Today, it has become an indispensable food while appreciating the bright moon for every family. Moon cakes come in various flavors which change according to the region but common fillings are nuts, sugar, sesame, ham and egg yolk.
                                     
As the moon cake is round in shape, it symbolizes the reunion of a family, so it is easy to understand how the eating of moon cakes under the round moon can inspire the missing of distant relatives. Nowadays, people present the moon cakes to relatives and friends to demonstrate that they wish them a long and happy life.

b)   Appreciating and Offering Sacrifice to the Moonlight
                                                        
Simple appreciation of the moon already means of sacrifice to the moon. Members of a family usually sit around a table eating and talking to their heart content and at the same time admiring the bright moon. While looking up the moon, people will think of their relatives afar and good wishes are expressed in their mind.
           

            Well, there are still a lot of Chinese cultures in traditional Chinese festivals I didn’t mention about because Chinese culture is too extensive.

Written by,
Fong Chee Foo,
Group Six,
Foundation in Arts,

July Intake.

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