Beijing college
student Zhou Ji, 22, went to his hometown in southwest China's Chongqing
Municipality, thousands of miles from the national capital, for the
Spring Festival, or Chinese Lunar New Year Day (from February 3 to March
14 this year).
Zhou had not been home for a year. Zhou earns his own tuition fees and
could scarcely afford to forego a full-time vacation job. "But Spring
Festival is definitely an occasion to go home. For me, the festival
means getting together with the family," he said.
Like Zhou, hundreds of
millions of Chinese go home or travel with their families during the
Spring Festival. A gigantic holiday is tough on transport systems and
the tourism industry. The country's highways transport two billion
people, and its railways 156 million, during the 40-day peak travel
period around the Spring Festival.
How does Zhou plan to
celebrate the Spring Festival? Will he follow the traditional modes?
"Firecrackers? No, I haven't touched them for years. In my city they
are banned in the downtown area. There are a lot of fake and
poor-quality firecrackers around and they are dangerous," he said,
adding that when he was a child, young people set off fireworks at
squares and all the families watched together.
"A big dinner at home? No, my mother is too tired to prepare one and
too much meat or fish is bad for your health," he said, adding that
his father has made a New Year-eve dinner reservation at a
restaurant. "We had to call a lot of restaurants before we finally
found one as most are full."
"Temple fairs? No, they're too crowded. I just want to have a good
rest after a year of hard work," said Zhou, a typical representative
of a young Chinese generation that is excited by Christmas and
Valentine's Day but no longer sold on all the traditional rituals
that accompany the Spring Festival.
But traditional Spring Festival rituals are gaining in popularity
overseas. Christian Perlingiere, a Brazilian studying in the United
States, said last year's Chinese New Year celebration was highly
publicized and attracted hundreds of people in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
"As people become more interested in China, more Spring Festival
celebrations are being held around the world and have attracted a
large number of curious foreigners," said the young Brazilian who
studies Chinese language, culture and tradition at Georgetown
University in the US.
Celebrations include a parade with dragons, a concert with Chinese
traditional instruments and the consumption of delicious "niangao",
or Chinese New Year cakes which are made of sticky rice, said
Perlingiere.
Large cities in the US such as New York, San Francisco and
Washington D.C. also hold Spring Festival events which are sponsored
by China-focused trade organizations or Chinese cultural groups.
People enjoy those parades and fireworks, even if they don't really
understand the traditions very deeply, said Ryan Paul, an American
living in Beijing.
He said there are recognized holidays based on Irish, Italian,
African-American, and Jewish history in the US, but as yet, Spring
Festival is not recognized as a national holiday, even though many
Asians live in the US. "However, I predict it will soon become one."
A San Francisco-based website published a list of 2007 Chinese New
Year events, sponsored by Southwest Airlines. It includes a Chinese
New Year flower market fair, a carnival, a Chinese New Year concert
to be staged by San Francisco Symphony and an "Imperial Dinner" in
the San Francisco City Hall.
Meanwhile, the annual Miss Chinatown USA Pageant will be held during
the Spring Festival in San Francisco where Chinese-American women
from across the US will compete for the title and the opportunity to
win scholarships and become goodwill ambassadors for the Chinese
community. The event has been held annually since 1958.
A Chinese New Year Parade, said to be the largest celebration of its
kind outside Asia, will also be held in San Francisco. "The parade
is exciting," said Perlingiere. There are usually decorated floats,
marching bands, martial arts, stilt walkers, lion dancing, Chinese
acrobatics and the Dragon Show as the grand finale of the parade
which is accompanied by firecrackers.
Li Jialin who works in an American company in Beijing saw lion
dancing for the first time in 1999 in Perth, western Australia when
he was a high school student there. "Believe it or not, I had never
seen real, live lion dancing before that except on TV, not even in
Beijing where I was born," complained the Chinese young man. He
studied overseas for more than 10 years.
Li said traditional Chinese culture receives special attention
during the Spring Festival outside China. Last year, an Australian
telephone company gave every single overseas Chinese student in the
country a few free minutes to call home from their mobile phones on
Spring Festival day. "It was either a commercial promotion or just
being nice to us, but I reckon it's connected to the fact that
Chinese culture is growing quickly throughout the world," Li said.
"More foreigners are interested in China because of the country's
economic and political rise to the forefront of the world stage,"
said Perlingiere.
As a first generation Chinese-American, Edwin Young in San Francisco
said his parents still go through all the rituals of cleaning and
decorating the home, preparing delicious food, visiting relatives
and worshiping ancestors, but he and his siblings only visit their
parents for the Chinese New Year-eve dinner.
"No longer do I get new clothes, new pajamas and new slippers for
New Year's day. We also rarely visit other relatives now," said
Young, who is sorry that the traditions may be fading in China. "If
that happens, how can Chinese traditions continue here in San
Francisco?"
Last year, the Chinese government proclaimed "Spring Festival" one
of the country's intangible cultural heritages, along with Peking
Opera, acupuncture and Shaolin Kungfu.
Feng Jicai, an expert on folklore, said old people think Spring
Festival means new clothes, firecrackers and delicious food, but
young people take it as an opportunity to relax or travel. "Life is
getting better but also more stressful, and people need the
psychological comfort of a family reunion during traditional
festivals," said Feng.
March 10,
2007
By arrangement with
WFS
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