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Lantern Festival
The 15th day of the 1st lunar month is the Chinese Lantern Festival
because the first lunar month is called yuan-month and in the
ancient times people called night Xiao. The 15th day is the first
night to see a full moon. So the day is also called Yuan Xiao
Festival in China.According to the Chinese tradition, at the
very beginning of a new year, when there is a bright full moon
hanging in the sky, there should be thousands of colorful lanterns
hung out for people to appreciate. At this time, people will
try to solve the puzzles on the lanterns and eat yuanxiao (glutinous
rice ball) and get all their families united in the joyful atmosphere.
History
Until the Sui
Dynasty in the sixth century, Emperor Yangdi invited envoys from
other countries to China to see the colorful lighted lanterns
and enjoy the gala erformances.
By the beginning of the Tang Dynasty in the seventh
century, the lantern displays would last three days. The emperor also lifted
the curfew, allowing the people to enjoy the festive lanterns day and night.
It is not difficult to find Chinese poems which describe this happy scene.
In the Song Dynasty, the festival was celebrated for
five days and the activities began to spread to many of the big cities in China.Colorful
glass and even jade were used to make lanterns, with figures from folk tales
painted on the lanterns.
However, the largest Lantern Festival celebration took
place in the early part of the 15th century. The festivities continued for
ten days. Emperor Chengzu had the downtown area set aside as a center for displaying
the lanterns. Even today,there is a place in Beijing called Dengshikou.In Chinese,Deng
means lantern and Shi is arket.The area became a market where lanterns were
sold during the day.In the evening, the local people would go there to see
the beautiful lighted lanterns on display.
Today, the displaying of lanterns is still a big event
on the 15th day of the first lunar month throughout China. People enjoy the
brightly lit night. Chengdu in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, for example,
holds a lantern fair each year in the Cultural Park. During the Lantern Festival,the
park is literally an ocean of lanterns!Many new designs attract countless visitors.
The most eye-catching lantern is the Dragon Pole, This is a lantern in the
shape of a golden dragon, spiraling up a 27-meter -high pole, spewing fireworks
from its mouth. It is quite an impressive sight!
Origin<
There are many
different beliefs about the origin of the Lantern Festival.But
one thing for sure is that it had something to do with religious
worship.
One legend tells us that it was a time to worship Taiyi,
the God of Heaven in ancient times. The belief was that the God of Heaven controlled
the destiny of the human world. He had sixteen dragons at his beck and call
and he decided when to inflict drought,storms, fafmine or pestilence upon human
beings.Beginning with Qinshihuang, the first emperor to unite the country,
all subsequent emperors ordered splendid ceremonies each year. The emperor
would ask Taiyi to bring favorable weather and good health to him and his people.
Emperor Wudi of the Han Dynasty directed special attention to this event. In
104 BC,he proclaimed it one of the most important celebrations and the ceremony
would last throughout the night.
Another legend associates the Lantern Festival with
Taoism. Tianguan is the Taoist god responsible for good fortune. His birthday
falls on the 15th day of the first lunar month. It is said that Tianguan likes
all types of entertainment. So followers prepare various kinds of activities
during which they pray for good fortune.
The third story about the origin of the festival boes
like this. Buddhism first entered China during the reign of Emperor Mingdi
of the Eastern Han Dynasty. That was in the first century. However, it did
not exert any great influence among the Chinese people. one day, Emperor Mingdi
had a dream about a gold man in his palace. At the very moment when he was
about to ask the mysterious figure who he was, the gold man suddenly rose to
the sky and disappeared in the west. The next day, Emperor Mingdi sent a scholar
to India on a pilgrimage to locate Buddhist scriptures. After joumeying thousands
of miles,the scholar finally returned with the scriptures. Emperor Mingdi ordered
that a temple be built to house a statue of Buddha and serve as a repository
for the scriptures. Followers believe that the power of Buddha can dispel darkness.
So Emperor Mingdi ordered his subjects to display lighted
lanterns during what was to become the Lantern Festival.
Yuanxiao
Besides
entertainment and beautiful lanterns, another important part
of the Lantern Festival,or Yuanxiao Festival is eating small
dumpling balls made of glutinous rice flour. We call these balls
Yuanxiao or Tangyuan. Obviously, they get the name from the festival
itself. It is said that the custom of eating Yuanxiao originated
during the Eastern Jin Dynasty in the fourth centuty, then became
popular during the Tang and Song periods.
The fillings inside the dumplings or Yuansiao are either
sweet or salty. Sweet fillings are made of sugar, Walnuts, sesame, osmanthus
flowers, rose petals, sweetened tangerine peel, bean paste, or jujube paste.
A single ingredient or any combination can be used as the filling . The salty
variety is filled with minced meat, vegetables or a mixture.
The way to make Yuanxiao also varies between northern
and southern China. The usual method followed in southern provinceds is to
shape the dough of rice flour into balls, make a hole, insert the filling,
then close the hole and smooth out the dumpling by rolling it between your
hands.In North China,sweeet or nonmeat stuffing is the usual ingredient. The
fillings are pressed into hardened cores, dipped lightly in water and rolled
in a flat basket containing dry glutinous rice flour. A layer of the flour
sticks to the filling, which is then again dipped in water and rolled a second
time in the rice flour. And so it goes, like rolling a snowball, until the
dumpling is the desired size.
The custom of eating Yuanxiao dumplings remains. This
tradition encourages both old and new stores to promote their Yuanxiao products.
They all try their best to improve the taste and quality of the dumplings to
attract more customers.
Shunbun-no-hi- (Higan) |
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Cherry blossoms
Eiichi Kotozuka,
c. 1950s |
The origin of Higan — a seven-day
festival marking the vernal equinox, Shunbun-no-hi — is
unknown, but it was widely observed in Japan in the
eighth century. In 806 CE, the Emperor issued an ordinance
concerning its observance, and during the Meiji Era
(1868-1912 CE) the government made the day of the equinox
a national holiday.
The word higan< means “the
other shore,” a Buddhist term that comes from the
idea that there is a river marking the division of this
life from the world of salvation. This river is full
of illusion, passion, and sorrow, and only by crossing
to the other shore can one gain enlightenment and enter
nirvana. It is said that, when night and day are equal
(as occurs on the equinox) the Buddha appears on earth
to save stray souls and help them make the crossing.
Thus the visit to the family cemetery on this occasion
is a happy event.
The ritual of offering food and sake
to the ancestors developed into another custom typical
of the Higan observance, that of giving specially prepared
food—most commonly botamochi, a ball of
soft rice covered with sweetened bean paste—to
friends and neighbours.
In Japan it is said that the chill
of winter finally disappears after Shunbun-no-hi, a time
that cherry blossoms—the most popular symbol of
spring—first start to appear. Another flower, the higanbana,
marks the autumnal equinox observance,
Higan No Chu-nichi |
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