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Diversity
Affairs Feature
Chinese New
Year Festival
Hank Zou
Hank Zou, graduate student, stands next to a dragon symbolizing
the Spring Festival in the Regency Palace Seafood Restaurant in
Luoyang City, China.
The Chinese spring festival is coming; in fact, the festival is
the biggest and more ceremonious festival in China, just like Christmas
in the west countries. We all like it, no matter where you are,
you may expect to go home to reunite with your family. I think
maybe it is a kind of complex mood of our Chinese people. The dates
for this annual celebration are determined by the lunar calendar
rather than the Gregorian calendar, so the timing of the holiday
varies from late January to early February. Chinese New Year is
not only celebrated in China but in some other Asian countries
like Singapore, Indonesia and Korea where people also celebrate
Spring Festival.
Before the New Year comes, the people completely clean the indoors
and outdoors of their homes as well as their clothes. The celebration
begins right on the Eve of the Festival, when the whole family
comes and has a dinner together. This meal, always with dumplings,
can be quite a sumptuous one, during which the families exchange
good wishes for the oncoming year. On that night traditionally,
people also stick couplets expressing good wishes around the doorframe
and stay up all night. People tend to get up early the next day
and visit neighbor and relatives. The grown-ups may give some fortune
money to the children, which is often packed in red and symbolizes
good luck. The celebration of Spring Festival may commonly last
for 7 days, and is highlighted as one of the symbols of traditional
Chinese culture.
Well, I have already made plans on how to spend my spring festival
holidays of 2007. Maybe it’s not very perfect because I
can not go back to China, but I will try my best to spend the festival
with my friends, so I am too impatient to wait and wish the spring
festival of 2007 will come as quickly as possible.