1 / 13

15 Days of Celebration of the Chinese New Year

15 Days of Celebration of the Chinese New Year. Xin Chen 2010-03-24. Sweep away the bad luck. Decorate the home with red color paper-cuts and cheerful couplets. Wear n ew clothing, shoes, and get a hair-cut. Clean family altars and statues. Watch CCTV New Year Eve Gala Show.

leigh
Download Presentation

15 Days of Celebration of the Chinese New Year

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 15 Days of Celebration of the Chinese New Year Xin Chen 2010-03-24

  2. Sweep away the bad luck. Decorate the home with red color paper-cuts and cheerful couplets. Wear new clothing, shoes, and get a hair-cut. Clean family altars and statues. Watch CCTV New Year Eve Gala Show. Shoot off firecrackers. Prepare a festive dinner with pork, duck, chicken, fish and sweet delicacies. “Before New Year Day” Tradition

  3. Firecrackers

  4. Participate in a religious ceremony given in honor of Heaven and Earth, the gods of the household and the family ancestors. Give and receive red paper envelopes filled with money or treats. All knives and cleavers must be put away on New Year’s Day. New Year Day

  5. Day 2 Sons-in-laws visit their parents-in-law Day 3 The Third Day is known as "chì kǒu",means "the God of Blazing Wrath”. It is generally accepted that it is not a good day to socialize. Day 2 and Day 3

  6. Day 5 • In northern China, people eat dumplings • Celebrate the birthday of the Chinese God of Wealth. • Shoot off firecrackers, in the attempt to get Guan Yu's attention, ensuring his favor and good fortune for the new year. Guan Yu is the God of Justice.

  7. Dumplings

  8. Visit relatives and friends freely. Visit the temples to pray for good fortune and health for the coming year. Day 6 to 10

  9. Fujian people celebrate the birthday of Jade Emperor, the God of Underworld, at midnight. Tea, wine, fruit, vegetarian food or roasted suckling pig, and paper-folded gold ingots are served as gifts. Day 8 and Day 9

  10. Light lanterns to worship Buddha on the 15th day of the 1st lunar month, first full moon. Children carrying lanterns of all shapes in a parade at night. Eat sweet dumplings made of glutinous rice flour. Guess lantern riddles. Day 15- Lantern Festival

  11. Taboos • Cleaning must be done before, not during, the Chinese New Year period. • All debts must be cleared before the New Year. • Do not use words that are unlucky, such as the number 4, which sounds like “to die” • If you break something, you must turn it into a lucky saying, (“Sui Sui Ping An” for Good luck every year.) • No crying. • People must wear red. White, blue and gray are considered colors reserved for mourning.

  12. Chinese New Year The goal of the Chinese New Year celebration is that we enter into a new year of good blessings.

  13. About the Author This slideshow was prepared by Ms. Xin Chen in March 2010. Ms. Xin Chen is a second year student in a Masters of Public Administration program at USC School of Policy, Planning and Development. She is a foreign student from Fujian, China, who joined the program in August 2008 and expected to graduate in May 2010. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in Economics from Renmin University of China, Beijing.

More Related