Chinese New Year: What is it?

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Many Asian nations follow the lunar calendar, with the Chinese New Year being a 15-day festival starting on the first day of the first moon. Celebrants wear red, exchange gifts, and eat lucky foods. The festival ends with the Lantern Festival and fireworks. Vietnam’s Tet Nguyen Dan is celebrated for seven days, while Korea’s Sol-nal is a day to reflect on ancestors and family.

In many parts of Asia, nations follow the lunar calendar rather than the Gregorian calendar used by the rest of the world. Consequently, the year begins on a different day, usually in January or February according to the Gregorian calendar. Many nations, including Vietnam and Korea, celebrate the Lunar New Year with feasts and special foods. The Chinese, however, have turned the celebration into an art form: a 15-day festival called the Spring Festival in China, even though it’s known to the rest of the world as Chinese New Year.

Chinese New Year begins on the first day of the first moon of the year, which is considered an especially auspicious day. Children are given hong bao, lucky red envelopes filled with money, and families exchange visits and gifts. Most Chinese New Year celebrants wear red, which is a lucky color, and also refrain from reflecting on the past year and saying unfortunate words, as it is believed that the first day of the new year will determine your luck in the months ahead. come .

Chinese New Year continues with 15 festive days and auspicious days, including a day to welcome the god of wealth, a day to celebrate agriculture and manufacturing, and days to celebrate friends and family. Friendships and family relationships are a very important part of Chinese New Year and a great many invitations to dinner and food are exchanged as part of this tradition. Numerous lucky foods are served during the Chinese New Year festival, and after all that rich lunch, the 13th day of the festival is reserved for eating rice and bitter vegetables to cleanse the palate.

On the fifteenth day, the Chinese New Year celebration culminates with the Lantern Festival, traditionally held at night. During the Lantern Festival, hundreds of citizens flood the street with lanterns representing wealth, animals, historical figures, plants, and a variety of other things. The lanterns are paraded through towns and cities throughout China, Taiwan, and parts of the world with large Chinese communities. The Lantern Festival ends with a burst of fireworks to celebrate the coming year, as celebrants eat special round dumplings to celebrate unity.

In Vietnam, the new year festival is known as Tet Nguyen Dan and is celebrated for seven days. Much like the Chinese New Year, Tet is believed to be an especially auspicious time in Vietnam that will set the fortunes of the celebrants for the coming year. Special foods are eaten and gifts are exchanged. In Korea, the one-day festival is known as Sol-nal and is a time to reflect on ancestors and family.




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