Selasa, 05 Februari 2008

Happy Chinese New Year


Chinese New Year is the most important holiday of the year for the Chinese. The Chinese will settle all the debts they can, buy oranges for good luck and kumquat trees to decorate their homes, and clean the house. There will be a family feast, and the older people will give little red packets of luck money (ang paus) to the youngsters. Usually there is a parade, including lion and dragon dances, stilt walkers, floats and acrobats. And there is noise: fireworks at midnight, gongs, drums and cymbals at the parade.

Doorways get a fresh coat of paint and the windows get decorated with paper cut outs.

Happiness, wealth, and long life are the primary themes.

Many families will play cards and board games on the evening of the February 1st while they wait for midnight. Every light in the house is traditionally left on. Early the next morning, the red money packets are given out. Then people go door to door to wish their neighbors and relatives a prosperous new year.

Fifteen days later the lantern festival marks the end of the month-long New Year season.

If you're looking for somewhere to go for Chinese New Year, there are a host of possibilities. Hong Kong is a popular destination for Chinese New Year. Personally, though, I'd rather be in Singapore where it will be warm in January and February.

The Chinese are not the only people who celebrate the holiday. The Koreans, Tibetans, and many other Asians keep the holiday. In Vietnam the holiday is called Tet.

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