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Let’s Learn About: Holidays & Celebrations

2 January 2007

 Lets Learn About: Holidays & Celebrations

I figured since we have just finished celebrating some of our most important holidays here in the US, why not learn about holidays and celebrations in China so here we go!

The Chinese celebrate 2 sets of holidays and festivals – Official and Traditional. That could be fun! First the Official.

New Year’s Day (January 1) – This is not nearly celebrated as much as it is in other parts of the world because it is overshadowed by the upcoming Chinese New Year (this year Feb 18th). However, employees will enjoy a paid day-off(thus the reason the CCAA worked over the weekend and then are off Jan 1-3). There are parties everywhere, in parks, dancing halls and universities.
International Women’s Day (March icon cool Lets Learn About: Holidays & Celebrations – Who knew? Female employees will get a whole or an half paid day-off on the day while the men are at the mercy of their employers. Sounds good to me!
Tree-Planting Day (Arbor Day) (April 1) – Highly promoted since the late 70′s by the reformist government and yet to become established. It marks the begining of a greening campaign all over the country during the month each year. There is no paid leave on this day.
International Labor Day (May 1) – Celebrations are simular to New Year’s Day. The holiday was prompted by economic development and commercialization so employees are granted five days paid leave so that they can tour the country and do their shopping. Sounds like one step better than our Tax-Free Weekends!
Youth Day (May 4) -A day in memory of the first mass student movement in 1919—a movement touched off by the then Chinese government that gave in to the Japanese government’s attempt to colonize Shandong Province. It is also an anti-Confucius movement as well as one that promoted the western scientific and democratic ideas. Today, youth rallies are rare, but parties and picnic outings are gaining popularity.
Children’s Day (June 1) – It is the most memorable day of Chinese children. Access to almost all entertainment and educational facilities such as cinemas, parks and children’s museums is free to them. Elementary schools throw celebration parties while parents shower them with presents. Hmm, how many other kids would like to start THAT tradition?!
The CCP’s Birthday (July 1) – It marked the founding of the Chinese Communist Party in 1921 in Shanghai. It is usually characterized by front page editorials from major government news pagers. Employees do not have a paid leave day and there are no big parties.
Army’s Day (August 1) – A communist-led nationalist army staged the first armed uprising in Chinese communist history against the Nationalists on August 1, 1927. It was regarded as the beginning of the Red Army (later the People’s Liberation Army). Now the anniversary is often used to promote better relationships between the army and civilians, a tradition believed to have helped it beat the Nationalists during the civil war in 1949. It is not a paid-leave day. Gotta love political holidays…:)
Teacher’s Day (September 1) – It was started in the early eighties as an effort to reverse the anti-intellectual sentiment nurtured by the Cultural Revolution but has since become an established holiday. However, it is yet to become a paid-leave day for the teachers – go figure!
National Day (October 1) – BIG Holiday! It is the anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949. Chinese employees have been given a week-long paid leave so that they can travel. Fireworks and parties are integral part of the fun.

Now for the Traditional. Please remember that the calendar the Chinese traditional holidays follow is of a unique lunar-solar system. Therefore, 1st of the 1st month referred here does not necessarily mean January 1. More on the Chinese calendar later.

Spring Festival, or Chinese New Year (1st day of the 1st lunar month -this year) Feb 18th)
The biggest and most celebrated festival in China and part of East and South East Asia. It is as important to the Chinese as Christmas is to Westerners. For more details, please refer to this informative
Chinese New Year page.
Lantern Festival or Yuanxiao Festival (15th day of the 1st lunar month) – This day features lantern displays, lion and dragon dances, and eating yuanxiao (ball-shaped sweet rice dumplings with delicious stuffing.). The Lantern Festival also marks the end of the Chinese New Year season.
Qing Ming (Pure & Bright in Chinese) – Originally it was a celebration of spring. People used to customarily go out on an excursion to “tread grass”. Later it became day dedicated to ancestors. Tidying up ancestors’ tombs is its major big event.
Duan Wu (Dragon Boat) Festival (5th day of the 5th lunar month) – Said to be in memory of a great patriot poet of the then State of Chu during the Warring States period (475-221 B.C.), Qu Yuan (Ch’u Yuan), who drowned himself to protest his emperor who gave in to the bully State of Chin. For fear that fish may consume his body, people of Chu threw launched their boats and started throwing rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves into the river where he was drowned to feed the fish. Now the big event of dragon boat contest may be a legacy of such activity. People today still eat the bamboo-leave rice dumplings on the occasion today.
The Seventh Eve (7th day of the 7th lunar month) – It is a traditional holiday almost lost to the younger generations today. It originates from a beautiful legend about a cowboy and a fairy who were cruelly separated and reunited once each year on this happy sad occasion.

Mid-Autumn Festival(Moon Festival) (15th day of the 8th lunar month) – It is second only to the Chinese New Year in significance. The moon on this day is the fullest and largest to the eye. Viewing it by the whole family while feasting on good wine, fruits and moon-cakes features the night event. There is also a beautiful story behind it. Children are told that there’s fairy on the moon living in a spacious but cold crystal palace with her sole companion, a jade rabbit. A heavenly general and friend would occasionally pay her a visit, bringing along his fragrant wine. She would then dance a beautiful dance.
Chongyang Festival / Elders’ Day (9th day of the 9th lunar month) -According to the famous Chinese classic Yi Jing(I Ching) six and nine are both yang, or positive, numbers. Therefore, the nineth day of the nineth lunar month is a day to be celebrated as a Double Yang Festival. It is marked by family outing, particularly going up to the top of a hill. Viewing and admiring juhua (chrysanthemum flowers), decorating houses with zhuyu (cornus officinalis plants), eating double-yang cakes, and drinking chrysanthemum wine are part and parcle of the festival. In 1989, the Chinese government made the festival the Elders’ Day to encourage young people to respect their parents… I think we could use that here, don’t you?
Laba Jie (8th day of the 12th lunar month) -Most Chinese treat it as a reminder of the approaching Chinese New Year, hardly aware of its Buddhist background. This day is to celebrate Sakyamuni, founder of Buddhism. As he achieved revelation by practicing asceticism, surviving merely on a meal of congee a day, eating a particular type of congee called labazhou is the most important event of this festival.
Jizao Festival or Kitchen God Festival (23rd day of the 12th lunar month) – China has a long history of worshipping fire. After zao (kitchen stove) was invented, the belief in Zao Wangye (Kitchen God) began. Kitchen God is supposed to watch the household where he resides and reports its deeds or misdeeds to Yuhuangdadi (Jade Emperor of Heaven) on the day of the Jizao Festival, a week before the eve of the Chinese New Year. Around the Jizao Festival, people would try to bribe Kitchen God with maltose candy so that, with his sweetened mouth, he would put in a good word for them before Jade Emperor.
Dongzhi Festival or Winter Solstice Festival – This festival originated from the Han dynasty (206 B.C.—A.D. 220). It used to be treated as more important than the Chinese New Year. Today its importance has greatly decreased, and it is celebrated only in parts of the country. The day is celebrated with the eating of huntun (soup dumplings) in North China and mituan (rice-ball dumplings) in the south. The festival is also marked by the worshiping of heaven and ancestors.

All of that being said, there are still other events that may be celebrated based on the ethnic group involved. These range anywhere from The Zhuang’s Sanyuesan (Song Festival), to The Bai’s Sanyuejie (Third Moon Fair), to The Tibetan New Year and more.

**Bonus Question: How many officially recognised ethnic minority groups are there?
(Highlight here: 56) If you got it right then you were paying attention before…yay you!!
As for how all of these holidays and celebrations will impact on Miss P3 and our entire family, we plan to integrate some of the most important celebrations like the Moon Festival in the fall and Chinese New Year. P3 needs to be proud to be Chinese and we are both excited proud to have her as part of our family make up. Celebrating some of the wonderful Chinese Holidays is just one way we will work to teach her and show her just how wonderful she is and what a blessing it is for us to have her in our family!!
Most of this information was gleaned from several sources but largely http://www.wku.edu/~yuanh/China/ Watch for upcoming posts on the Chinese Zodiac, How referrals happen, and more!
Til next time…. zie jian!
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About

Alyson is the Mama in Charge around these parts - owner, editor and chief ponytail wrangler. She enjoys a challenge that allows her to share part of her multi-faceted background and personality from working for Disney to traveling to China to reading Shakespeare to raising cattle. Her 3 amazing daughters and loving husband keep her on her toes as well. If she is not here, try looking for her 3PsinaPod on Twitter and Facebook.

2 Comments »

  • 1 Stacey said:

    What a great post so consise and informative without being overwhelming. I am going to haft to make a note of this so I can come back and mark my calandar now. Alyson I just wanted to say thank you for all the support you have shown me in my journey, it has not gone unnoticed. You too are almost there so hold on and before you know it all your dreams will come true! Stacey

  • 2 Mary, Jason, & Maya said:

    Wow!!! This is awesome!!! I am printing this and keeping it, because it is clear and concise. Thank you. Are you guys next in line? Oh, I hope so. I can’t wait to see P3. I can’t think of a better Valentine. Happy New Year!

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