Happy Lunar New Year!

This past Saturday (2/4) we spent the day in Seattle’s International District, (Chinatown), enjoying the Lunar New Year celebrations.  It was nice to get a small taste of Chinese culture without traveling to the other side of the globe.  Thousands of Chinese Americans came out to celebrate their culture and customs which for them goes back hundreds of generations.

Happy Lunar New Year! It’s the year of the Rabbit.
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According to lore, the year of the Rabbit will be full of excitement, prosperity, and surprises.  The rabbit is considered the luckiest of the twelve animals that make up the Chinese zodiac.

The Chinese Lunar New Year celebration began during the XIA dynasty in the 21st century BC.  More than 4000 years ago!  The traditions and celebrations are still going strong today.

The myth of Nian.
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Nian was a mythical monster who would rise out of the sea and attack villages eating people and livestock every New Year’s Eve.  The villagers would all flee and hide but one day an old man stayed to confront Nian.  When the villagers return the next morning, the old man was fine, and the village was untouched.  When asked how, the old man explained that he had put red banners across all the doors and gates, wore his best bright red tunic, lit firecrackers, banged his cymbals, and scared Nian away.

To this day people hang red banners on their homes, wear red clothing, and a large part of their New Year celebrations include parades through town wearing red, lighting firecrackers, and banging cymbals.

The Dragon Dance

The dragon dance dates to ancient times.  The dragon symbolizes wisdom, power, and wealth.  They are seen as honorable and noble, not as monsters. They are thought to bring good luck.  Quite different from the dragons we watched in Game of Thrones.

The dragon’s colors have different significances where green brings a great harvest, yellow shows respect for the empire, gold represents prosperity, and red creates excitement and good fortune.

During the dragon dance, it is considered good luck to touch the dragons as they pass by.

The Lion Dance

The lion dance is one of the most important traditions of the Lunar New Year celebrations.  Lions symbolize power, wisdom, and superiority.  The lion dances to bring good luck and ward off evil spirits.

Lion dance competitions are held around the world as part of the new year celebrations. Our lion dance team from Seattle won Nationals and came in 3rd  place in the world competition in Beijing.

There are two people in the Lion costume and their dances are an amazing combination of choreography and acrobatics.

As with the dragon, it is considered good luck to pet the lion.

 

The Drunken Lion Dance

 

The Lantern Festival

The lantern festival happens on the 15th day of the first lunar month.  It happens two weeks after the Chinese New Year and marks the first full moon of the new lunar year.   The Lantern Festival also closes out the Chinese New Year festivities.  This year the Lantern Festival was held on February 5th.

On this night throughout China and Chinatowns around the globe, streets will be filled with colorful lanterns.  The dragons and lions will dance, cymbals will crash, and firecrackers will explode.

Unfortunately, I missed the local Lantern Festival so I have no pictures to share.  If you Google it you will find a wealth of beautiful photographs.

If you get a chance to attend a Lunar New Year celebration in a Chinatown near you I encourage you to go.  Wade in, rub elbows, eat the food, see their smiles, talk to the people, and embrace the differences.  It was a wonderful experience for us.

I find that culture shock is not something to avoid; it’s something to embrace, It’s good. It’s the growing pains of a broadening perspective.” – Rick Steves, from Travel as a Political Act

BR

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