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The
Lantern Festival
15th of 1st month of Chinese Calender
It
marks the end of the Chinese New Year Season, always 15 days after Lunar
New Year Day. Lantern exhibits, lion and dragon dances, and eating Tang
Yuan (ball-shaped boiled sweet rice dumplings with delicious stuffings)
are events today. It is very much celebrated in the rural areas by farmers.
The Eve of the New Year is very carefully observed.
Supper is a feast, with all members coming together. One of the most popular
course is jiaozi, dumplings boiled in water. "Jiaozi" in Chinese literally
mean "sleep together and have sons", a long-lost good wish for a family.
After dinner, it is time for the whole family to sit up for the night
while having fun playing cards or board games or watching TV programs
dedicated to the ocassion. Every light is supposed to be kept on the whole
night. At midnight, the whole sky will be lit up by fireworks and firecrackers
make everywhere seem like a war zone. People's excitement reach its zenith.
Very early the next morning, children greet
their parents and receive their presents in terms of cash wrapped up in
red paper packages from them. Then, the family start out to say greetings
from door to door, first their relatives and then their neighbors. It
is a great time for reconciliation. Old grudges are very easily cast away
during the greetings. The air is permeated with warmth and friendliness.
During and several days following the New Year's day, people are visiting
each other, with a great deal of exchange of gifs. The New Year atmosphere
is brought to an anti-climax fifteen days away where the Festival of Lanterns
sets in. It is an occasion of lantern shows and folk dances everywhere.
One typical food is the Tang Yuan, another kind of dumplings made of sweet
rice rolled into balls and stuffed with either sweet or spicy fillings.
The Lantern Festival marks the end of the New
Year season and afterwards life becomes daily routines once again. This
description is based upon the recollection of my own experience. Customs
of observing the New Year vary from place to place, considering that China
is a big country not only geographically, but also demographically and
ethnically. Yet, the spirit underlying the diverse celebrations of the
Chinese New Year is the same: a sincere wish of peace and happiness for
the family members and friends.
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