Spring Festival
The Spring Festival to the Chinese people
is as important as Christmas to people in the West. to ordinary Chinese, the festival
actually begins on the eve of the lunar Nee Year' Day and ends on the fifth day of the
first month of the lunar calendar. The 15th of the first month, which normally is called
the lantern Festival, marks the official end of the Spring Festival in many parts of the
country. Guo Nian, meaning passing the year, is the common term among the Chinese people
for celebrating the Spring Festival. It actually means greeting the new year. At midnight
at the turn of the old and new years, people used to let off firecrackers to greet the
arrival of the new year. In an instant the whole city would be engulfed in the deafening
noise of the firecrackers. In 1993, however, the Beijing People's Congress adopted are
solution to ban the letting off of firecrackers and fireworks in the city proper for
considerations of safety and environmental protection. Therefore there will be no more
firecrackers for the city during the Spring Festival. But a cassette recorder company has
already produced a cassette that records the joyous noise of firecrackers for those who're
nostalgic of the old custom. One of the popular activities among Beijing residents during
Spring Festival is a meat dumpling feast on New Year's Eve. That evening, all the members
of the family would sit around a table making meat dumplings.
A Day in Memory of A Patriotic Poet
The fifth day of the fifth month of the
lunar year is an important day for the Chinese people. The day is called Duan Wu (meaning
Day of Right Mid-Day) and is observed everywhere in China. It all originates from
folklore. It says that Qu Yuan, a patriotic poet of the State of Chu during the Warring
States Period more than 2,000 years ago, drowned himself in the Miluo River in Hunan
Province because the corrupt king of Chu refused to listen to his advice. The State of Chu
was soon annexed by the State of Qin. Later the local people made rice dumplings wrapped
in redelivers and threw them into the Miluo River in the hope that fish in the river would
eat the rice dumplings instead of the body of the deceased poet. People today still
practice this custom, but they eat the dumplings instead of throwing them into the river.
Another activity during the day is the dragon boat race. It also has something to do with
the drowning of the poet. at first the local people raced out in boats in the hope of
rescuing the poet. Later boat race became an activity and the boats gradually developed
into dragon boats.
Moon Festival
On the 15th day of the eight month of the lunar calendar, the moon is full
and the Chinese people celebrate the Moon(or Mid -autumn)Festival. The round shape to a
Chinese means family reunion. Therefore the Moon Festival is a holiday for members of a
family to get together wherever it is possible. On that day sons and daughters will bring
their family members back to their parents' house for a reunion. Sometimes people who have
already settled overseas will come back to visit their parents on that day. As every
Chinese holiday is accompanied by some sort of special food, on the Moon Festival, people
eat moon cakes, a kind of cookie with fillings of sugar, fat, sesame, walnut, the yoke of
preserved eggs, ham or other ingredients. In Chinese fairy tales, there live on the moon
the fairy Chang E , a wood cutter named Wu Gang and a jade rabbit which is Chang E's pet .
In the old days, people paid respect to the fairy Chang E and her pet the jade rabbit. The
custom of paying homage to the fairy and rabbit is gone,but moon cakes are showing
improvement every year. There are now hundreds of varieties a month before the arrival of
the Moon Festival.Some moon cakes are of very high quality and very delicious.