The Spring Festival
The
Spring Festival, also known as "Guo Nian" or "the
passing of the year," is China's oldest traditional festival.
The fesival celebrates the new year of the Chinese Lunar Calendar.
The lunar calendar's January 1 is "the beginning of the year,
the beginning of the month and the beginning of the day." The
celebrations last from New Year's Eve to the 15th day of the year's
first lunar month, which is the Lantern Festival.
People traditionally spend New Year's Eve at home with all the family
around them. This often means a long journey for those who live
away from the place they grew up or where their parents live. The
family will celebrate with a sumptuous feast during which every
member will join in toasting and giving each other New Year's blessings.
Papercuts
During the Spring Festival, many families decorate their window
panes with colourful and intricate papercuts portraying characters
from Chinese opera, flowers, birds, insects and fish.
New
Year's Couplets New Year's couplets, written on two strips of
red paper, are an important custom of the Chinese Spring Festival.
On the lunar New Year's Eve, families in both urban and rural areas
make it a point to grace their gate posts or door panels with the
couplets, composed of two sentences that complement each other and
often rhyme expressing their hopes for the coming year.
New
Year's Paintings New Year's paintings are a type of Chinese
folk art that draws inspiration from the rural landscape and expresses
traditional notions of what is important in life, such as prosperity
and babies. During the Spring Festival, many Chinese people pin
up a few New Year's paintings in their living rooms to bid farewell
to the old year and greet the new.
Greeting
Cards Sending New Year's greeting cards to one's friends and
family is yet another Chinese tradition.
Sending the cards is a token of good will and is a useful way of
keeping in touch with people one hasn't seen for a long time or
who live far away.
Candles
Throughout the Spring Festival, from the first day of the lunar
new year to the Lantern Festival, as well as on other important
days of the year, it is traditional for all Chinese people, whatever
their ethnic origins, to light brightly-coloured candles as an expression
of their joyful mood.
Staying
Up On the lunar New Year's Eve, Chinese families gather for
the reunion dinner. After eating, the whole family, including the
children, stays up until after midnight or even all night to see
the old year out and the new year in.
Jiaozi
Jiaozi, or steamed dumplings, is a popular Chinese food. It is customary
for people in north China to celebrate festivals by making and eating
jiaozi. On New Year's Eve, the family gathers to prepare jiaozi,
a time that is acknowledged as a fine opportunity to catch up on
local gossip.
Firecrackers
It is traditional in China to celebrate the Spring Festival by letting
off firecrackers or holding fireworks displays. As a result, the
New Year's Eve night-sky is often a riot of colour and everyone
is kept awake to enjoy the festivities by the noise of explosions
all around.
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